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Voting Begins In Fledgling 'State'

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  • Voting Begins In Fledgling 'State'

    VOTING BEGINS IN FLEDGLING 'STATE'

    CNN
    http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf /07/19/karabakh.election.reut/
    July 19 2007

    STEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (Reuters) -- Voting for a
    new leader started in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh on
    Thursday in an election intended to stress the Armenian-populated
    region's self-proclaimed independence from Azerbaijan.

    Armenia's current president Robert Kocharyan is a former leader of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The head of the region's election commission Sergey Nasibyan hailed the
    election campaign as democratic and said local and foreign observers
    were monitoring the polls, Armenian television reported.

    Muslim Azerbaijan, which lost control of Nagorno-Karabakh after a
    war in the early 1990s, has already denounced the election as illegal
    under international law.

    At least 25 percent of the enclave's 91,000 voters have to take part
    for the 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (0300 to 1500 GMT) election to be considered
    valid by Karabakh authorities. Anyone taking over 50 percent of the
    votes in the first round wins outright.

    Karabakh seceded from Azerbaijan in the 1990s and proclaimed
    independence, though this has not been recognized by the rest of
    the world.

    No international organizations will monitor the vote, in which five
    hopefuls are running to replace Karabakh's current leader Arkady
    Gukasyan, who is due to step down after holding the post for two
    five-year terms.

    Bako Saakyan, a 46-year-old former head of Karabakh's security service
    who is openly supported by the incumbent, is the favorite to win. His
    main rival is the region's deputy foreign minister Masis Mailyan,
    aged 39.

    Many of the Azeri minority fled during the fighting, which claimed
    more than 35,000 lives before a cease-fire was brokered in 1994,
    and the region is now populated almost entirely by ethnic Armenians,
    who enjoy Christian Armenia's backing.

    Armenia's current president Robert Kocharyan is a former leader of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The authorities have declared their support for Saakyan. This means
    it is namely him who will become the next president," said a taxi
    driver in the Karabakh capital, Stepanakert.

    Both leading contenders are adamant on the main issue -- full
    independence for Karabakh.

    Saakyan says he wants to make the sliver of land and its 140,000 people
    "an example of democratic rule" to persuade the international community
    to recognize Karabakh's independence.

    "Creating civil society is the way towards resolving the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue," he has said during his campaign.

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe has been
    trying to broker a peace deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia since
    the 1994 cease-fire.

    Mailyan said he hopes that eventual international recognition
    of Serbia's rebel province of Kosovo, populated mainly by ethnic
    Albanians, will create an important precedent leading to officially
    accepted independence for Karabakh.

    "The Kosovo precedent, if it occurs and if international recognition
    finally takes place, is of interest to me because an unrecognized
    state will thus become recognized, irrespective of what its mother
    country has to say," Mailyan told Reuters.

    "This means we have a chance to become independent -- according to
    a new scenario."

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has already said he does not
    consider Kosovo a precedent for Nagorno-Karabakh.
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