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Armenian Group Gears Up For Vote Monitoring

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  • Armenian Group Gears Up For Vote Monitoring

    ARMENIAN GROUP GEARS UP FOR VOTE MONITORING
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 6 2007

    Armenia's largest election-monitoring organization said on Tuesday that
    it will observe the May 12 parliamentary elections with a record-high
    number of volunteers.

    The group, It's Your Choice (IYC), plans to deploy observers in
    virtually all of the country's 2,000 or so polling stations on
    voting day. It was able to cover only between 60 and 70 percent of
    the precincts during previous Armenian elections.

    According to the IYC chairman, Harutiun Hambartsumian, the effort
    will require the mobilization of as many as 4,000 people committed to
    fostering democratic change in Armenia. The number of IYC observers
    has been considerably lower in the past.

    Speaking to journalists, Hambartsumian said his Western-funded
    organization hopes that the forthcoming elections will mark a major
    improvement over the previous polls that were marred by serious
    irregularities reported by both domestic and international observers.

    "Unfortunately, up until now we have reported more shortcomings than
    positive things," he said.

    Hambartsumian expressed concern about some of the recently passed
    amendments to Armenia's electoral code that were supposed to
    complicate fraud. He was particularly critical of a provision allowing
    various-level commissions to meet and make decisions without a quorum.

    The IYC's most recent vote monitoring report came in the wake of the
    disputed constitutional referendum of November 2005. The 12-page report
    concluded that the vote failed short of democratic standards because
    of "serious violations of the electoral process, illegal voting and
    especially ballot box stuffing."

    The Armenian elections will also be monitored by over 300 Western
    observers representing the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe. Their findings will be particularly important for the
    international legitimacy of the vote. The first long-term OSCE
    observers are expected to arrive in Yerevan next week.
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