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Karabakh Frontrunner Sweeps Presidential Vote

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  • Karabakh Frontrunner Sweeps Presidential Vote

    KARABAKH FRONTRUNNER SWEEPS PRESIDENTIAL VOTE
    By Karine Kalantarian in Stepanakert

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 20 2007

    The candidate backed by the leadership and main political parties of
    Nagorno-Karabakh scored a resounding victory in Thursday's presidential
    election, local election officials said on Friday.

    According to the preliminary vote results released by the Central
    Election Commission (NSS), Bako Sahakian, the former head of Karabakh's
    National Security Service, won 85 percent of the vote.

    They showed his main challenger, Masis Mayilian, coming in a distant
    second with only 12 percent.

    The CEC put the voter turnout at just over 77 percent.

    Mayilian quickly conceded defeat, saying that he will congratulate
    Sahakian after the publication of the final vote results. "I consider
    Bako Sahakian a legitimately elected president and respect the choice
    of our people," he told a news conference in Stepanakert.

    Mayilian, who was the unrecognized republic's deputy foreign minister
    until recently, described the election as a further boost to Karabakh's
    "democratic image." "Our team has done everything in its power to
    give our citizens a real choice and to hold the elections within the
    bounds of law," he said.

    The Mayilian campaign lodged more than 20 written complaints to the CEC
    alleging ballot box stuffing and other irregularities. Most of those
    complaints were rejected by the CEC. The commission chairman, Sergey
    Nasibian, told RFE/RL that election officials confirmed and prevented
    some of the attempted violations reported by the opposition candidate.

    Mayilian agreed that the alleged fraud was not serious enough to
    affect the election outcome. "Even if there were falsifications,
    most votes were properly counted," he said.

    The nearly one hundred observers from Armenia, Russia, Europe
    and the United States, most of them monitoring the vote in their
    private capacity, also described it as largely democratic in separate
    statements on Friday.

    Leading international organizations and Western governments have
    joined Azerbaijan in denouncing the election, saying that it can not
    be deemed legitimate in the absence of the disputed region's former
    Azerbaijani minority.

    "The European Union underlines that it does not recognize the
    independence of Nagorno-Karabakh," the EU's Portuguese presidency said
    in a statement on Thursday. "Neither does it recognize the legitimacy
    of these 'presidential elections,' which should not have any impact
    on the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

    The authorities in Stepanakert and Yerevan have dismissed the
    criticism, arguing that the Karabakh Armenians should be represented
    in the ongoing peace talks by their elected leaders.

    "These elections testify to the success of a statehood anchored in
    democratic values," President Robert Kocharian said in a congratulatory
    message to Sahakian. "They once again demonstrated the irreversibility
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's existence."
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