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Armenians hungry for change in parliamentary election

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  • Armenians hungry for change in parliamentary election

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 12, 2007 Saturday 12:34 AM GMT


    Armenians hungry for change in parliamentary election

    YEREVAN, May 12 2007


    Armenians go to the polls Saturday hungry for change in what is being
    billed as a litmus test for democracy in this impoverished ex-Soviet
    country.

    Surveys show an overwhelming majority of Armenians support radical
    reform, but polls predict pro-government parties will come out ahead
    in the parliamentary election.

    The vote is seen as a key test of democracy in the small mountainous
    republic wedged between Turkey and Iran, where no election has been
    judged fair since independence with the collapse of the Soviet Union
    in 1991.

    More than 20 opposition parties are running and analysts say these
    divisions have scuttled chances of defeating two pro-government
    parties -- the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HKK) and the
    Prosperous Armenia party headed by millionaire former World Arm
    Wrestling Champion Gagik Tsarukian.

    Opposition leaders claim the vote will be rigged and are already
    planning street demonstrations on Sunday to pressure the government
    to overturn the results.

    About 2.3 million of Armenia's three million people are registered to
    vote in elections for 131 seats in the National Assembly.

    Hundreds of local and international observers will monitor the vote,
    including more than 300 from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe.

    The United States and European Union have repeatedly warned of
    negative consequences if no improvement is seen over past elections,
    including potential cuts of foreign aid and the scaling back of
    relations.

    Cuts in foreign assistance could be disastrous for Armenia, where
    more than 30 percent of people live on less than two dollars (1.50
    euros) a day.

    The election is also seen as a dress rehearsal for a presidential
    vote due next year after President Robert Kocharian steps down at the
    end of his second term. The HKK, led by Kocharian's chosen successor
    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, is widely expected to take first
    place.

    Kocharian has called on voters to support pro-government parties,
    warning of instability if the opposition came to power.

    "If the two most important governmental institutions -- the president
    and the parliament -- start a confrontation, the people will be the
    ones to suffer," he said on Armenian television.

    Polls open Saturday at 0300 GMT and close at 1500 GMT, with
    preliminary results expected within 24 hours.
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