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Constitutional Court Opens Election Appeal Hearings

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  • Constitutional Court Opens Election Appeal Hearings

    CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OPENS ELECTION APPEAL HEARINGS
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 1 2007

    Armenia's Constitutional Court on Friday began hearings on appeals
    against the official results of the May 12 parliamentary elections
    which have been filed by four opposition groups alleging large-scale
    fraud.

    Three of them, the Hanrapetutyun and Nor Zhamanakner parties and
    the Impeachment bloc, are demanding that the court invalidate the
    official figures and order a rerun of voting held under the system
    of proportional representation. The fourth applicant, the Orinats
    Yerkir Party of former parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian, is
    seeking recounting of ballots in 10 percent of some 2,000 polling
    stations across Armenia.

    Hovannes Markarian, who made the party's case during the first court
    hearing, said Orinats Yerkir will demand a full election re-run if
    the recount exposes violations and number discrepancies that were
    serious enough to affect the overall result.

    "In any case, elections must be deemed null and void in those precincts
    where fraud had a significant impact on the outcome," he said.

    According to the government-controlled Central Election Commission
    (CEC), Orinats Yerkir won about 7 percent of votes cast under the
    proportional system, earning it 8 seats in the 131-member National
    Assembly.

    The three other opposition groups challenging the credibility of the
    CEC tally fared even worse, failing to win a single parliament seat.

    In their opening statements in the court, their representatives accused
    the three main pro-government parties that won the vast majority
    of parliament seats of resorting to serious fraud both during the
    election campaign on voting day. They promised to submit evidence of
    the alleged fraud during the next court sessions.

    Under Armenian law, the Constitutional Court has to deliver a verdict
    on the appeals by June 10. The panel of nine judges has rejected
    opposition appeals against past Armenian elections criticized as
    undemocratic by Western monitors. Analysts say it is therefore unlikely
    to invalidate the latest polls, especially considering their largely
    positive assessment by the West.

    The leaders of Hanrapetutyun, Impeachment, and Nor Zhamanakner admit
    that their chances of winning the case are slim. But they hope that
    the court action will have a public resonance and give a new momentum
    to their ongoing campaign of anti-government demonstrations.

    The three groups again failed to pull a large crowd as they held a
    weekly rally in Yerevan on Friday. Only about 1,000 people turned
    out to attend it.
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