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Karabakh Armenians Elect New Leader

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  • Karabakh Armenians Elect New Leader

    KARABAKH ARMENIANS ELECT NEW LEADER
    By Karine Kalantarian in Stepanakert

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 19 2007

    Polls closed across Nagorno-Karabakh late Thursday in a presidential
    election which is widely expected to formalize the handover of power
    from the unrecognized republic's outgoing President Arkady Ghukasian
    to his preferred successor backed by some of his political opponents.

    According to the local Central Election Commission (CEC), almost
    two-thirds of Karabakh's 90,000 eligible voters cast their ballots
    as of 5 p.m. local time. The CEC is due to release the preliminary
    vote results within 24 hours by Friday evening.

    "Once again the people of Nagorno-Karabakh have confirmed their
    support for democratic values," Bako Sahakian, the presumed election
    frontrunner backed by Ghukasian and the main local political parties,
    told reporters at a polling station in Stepanakert. "For us, elections
    are a way of forming civil society."

    However, Sahakian's main challenger, Masis Mayilian, already alleged
    vote irregularities after casting his ballot in another Stepanakert
    precinct in the morning. His campaign headquarters lodged more than
    a dozen written complaints detailing alleged irregularities to the
    CEC by the time voting drew to close at 8 p.m.

    Both Ghukasian and Sahakian were quick to reject the allegations as
    "black PR," saying that the elections are free and fair. "I regret
    that black PR, dirty political techniques have been brought to Karabakh
    from Armenia," said Ghukasian. "I am convinced that the vast majority
    of those complaints do not correspond to reality."

    But as Sergey Nasibian, the CEC chairman, said later in the day,
    some of the alleged irregularities, including an attempt at multiple
    voting in one polling station, were found to have taken place.

    Nasibian said the CEC will closely look into the other claims made
    by the Mayilian camp.

    The vote was monitored by about one hundred monitors from Armenia,
    Russia, the United States and Europe, including a member of the
    European Parliament. The Italian parliamentarian, Giulietto Chiesa,
    told RFE/RL that he did not witness violations in any of the polling
    stations he visited.

    Ghukasian and the presidential candidates were unanimous in dismissing
    international criticism of the election. "The elections are held not
    for the international community but the people of Nagorno-Karabakh,"
    he said.
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