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OSCE Kicks Off Armenian Vote Monitoring

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  • OSCE Kicks Off Armenian Vote Monitoring

    OSCE KICKS OFF ARMENIAN VOTE MONITORING
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 21 2007

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe announced
    Wednesday the start of its observation mission for the May 12
    parliamentary elections in Armenia which it hopes will be more
    democratic than the ones held until now.

    As always, the crucial mission will be organized and led by the OSCE's
    election-monitoring body, the Office for Democratic Institutions and
    Human Rights (ODIHR). It has already deployed 13 election experts
    for that purpose. They will be joined by 29 long-term observers from
    various OSCE member states later this week.

    The Warsaw-based body also plans to dispatch some 300 short-term
    European and American observers to polling stations across Armenia
    on voting day. This is slightly more than the number of OSCE/ODIHR
    observers who monitored the previous Armenian parliamentary elections
    of May 2003. In addition, small groups of monitors are due to be
    deployed by the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, the Council of Europe,
    and possibly the European Parliament.

    Ambassador Boris Frlec, a Slovenian diplomat who will head the
    OSCE/ODIHR mission, expressed hope that the elections will mark
    significant improvement over the previous Armenian polls that were
    marred by serious fraud reported by OSCE observers. "Regrettably,
    Armenia's elections have so far fallen short of OSCE commitments for
    democratic elections," he told reporters in Yerevan. "The upcoming
    elections is a chance to turn this negative trend around."

    Similar hopes have repeatedly been voiced by the United States and the
    European Union. The Armenian authorities have assured them that they
    are committed to ensuring the freedom and fairness of the upcoming
    vote. They point, in particular, to the recently enacted amendments
    Armenia's Electoral Code that are mostly based on Council of Europe
    recommendations.

    According to Frlec, it is the "political will" of the Armenian
    government that will matter the most. "I believe that the recently
    amended election code of Armenia provides a sound framework for
    democratic elections," he said. "But the real challenge for the
    authorities is the implementation, in good faith, of the election
    code so that this and future elections will be held in accordance with
    [Armenia's] OSCE commitments. It is all about political will."
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