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What's in a Name? Plenty of Voter List Controversy

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  • What's in a Name? Plenty of Voter List Controversy

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 11 2007


    What's in a Name? Plenty of Voter List Controversy

    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    Published May 10, 2007


    Voter lists have long been the bugbear of Armenian elections. Two
    days ahead of the country's May 12 parliamentary vote, debates
    between the opposition and election officials over whether or not the
    voter registry has finally been put to rights continue apace.

    Central Elections Commission Chairman Garegin Azarian has pledged
    that the CEC will do everything possible to correct the outdated and
    incorrect voter lists that plagued previous Armenian elections.

    `I will resign if there is not a 100 hundred percent [clear] list,'
    Azarian said on April 19, news outlets reported. `It's impossible to
    have[lists] absolutely cleared of the names of dead people. And our
    lists have never been as accessible as they are now.'

    Corrections made to voter lists as of May 10 put the number of voters
    at 2, 285, 830 -- a decrease of 42,917 voters within over a month,
    according to the police passport and visa department, which is in
    charge of rectifying voter lists. Deceased voters accounted for just
    over a quarter of the names removed from the list. The official
    deadline to register to vote in the May 12 elections ended on April
    27.

    Voters have been urged to check their names on a list of registered
    voters posted on the CEC's website and to call a hotline to report
    omissions. The latest interim report by the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe/Office for Democratic Institutions and
    Human Rights' election observation mission, however, stated that
    `[r]eportedly only a low number of people used the two dedicated
    telephone hotlines to report voter list inaccuracies, or checked
    their voter list entries at PEC [precinct election commission]
    premises.'

    Colonel Alvina Zakarian, head of the police department in charge of
    voter lists, told EurasiaNet that everything has been done to have
    lists `as clear as possible.' The May 12 election will be noted for
    its improved voter lists, she claimed.
    Some opposition parties, however, contend that ample room for
    improvement still remains.

    Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) Party Chairman Artur Baghdasarian
    estimates that 25 to 30 percent of the voter lists remain inaccurate,
    based on surveys his party members have done. `[T]here are addresses
    and buildings in the lists that are totally non-existent,' he said.

    In Yerevan's Kentron district, for instance, residents of one street
    noticed that notifications for the elections had arrived for voters
    living at even-numbered addresses on the street, even though the
    street does not contain such numbers. Representatives of other
    opposition parties have made similar claims.

    Baghdasarian told EurasiaNet that he has submitted a written note
    about the incorrect addresses and names of non-existent voters to the
    police, but has not yet received a response. The opposition leader
    expressed doubt that corrections promised by the police department
    will be made to the final lists.

    `Frequently, the final lists posted two days before the election do
    not include the declared changes and people simply do not manage to
    pass on information [about mistakes] and to make changes,' he said.

    One parliamentarian from a party represented in Armenia's ruling
    coalition echoed those worries. The Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    has detected 900 duplicate names alone in the Yerevan district of
    Arabkir, stated Hrayr Karapetian, one of the party's leaders.

    `The passport department specified that all of them are real people,
    who simply have the same names,' Karapetian told EurasiaNet. Such
    flaws, he added, `can affect the outcome of the election.'

    The police department's Colonel Zakarian stressed that necessary
    changes have already been made to the final list of voters.

    One activist for an opposition party that has withdrawn from the race
    claims that the incorrect addresses and resident names are used by
    individuals who then use the names of the phantom voters to register
    votes for certain parties. `I have taken part in elections many times
    and I have seen how they show passports and get ballots, but, in
    fact, those are not passports, but their covers alone,' said Armen
    Arakelian, office manager for a former Armenian National Movement
    candidate for parliament.

    Controversy still surrounds reports of alleged collection of passport
    data by representatives of the pro-government Prosperous Armenia
    Party and the ruling Republican Party of Armenia - data that local
    election observers and opposition members claim could be used for
    voter fraud. Both parties have denied involvement in any such scheme.
    [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

    A 60-year-old resident of Gyulbenkian Street in the Yerevan
    neighborhood of Arabakir, however, shared a similar story with
    EurasiaNet. `I go to the apartments one by one and ask about the
    number of registered people, their availability on election day,'
    said the man, who asked not to be named. The man showed EurasiaNet a
    list he had made for one apartment building that indicated that over
    half of the building's residents had left Armenia.

    `They [the party] mainly need to know the names of those who will not
    be in Armenia on election day.' The man claimed that he receives
    about $100 from Prosperous Armenia for the information, but does not
    know for what purpose it is needed. `I am not alone,' he said.
    `People in neighboring buildings also get money to make such lists.'

    Opposition Orinats Yerkir Deputy Chairman Heghine Bisharian alleges
    that such lists will be used by so-called `mobile voter groups' who,
    she claimed, `will travel from constituency to constituency and will
    vote for the absent people. To escape being caught voting for other
    people, they collect exact data about who will not be here [on
    election day].'
    Prosperous Armenia spokesperson Baghdasar Mherian, however, denied
    the claim. The party, which claims to be the country's largest, has
    no need for such information, he said.

    `We have 400,000 members and each of them has family members,'
    Mherian said. `If we just double the number, the result will be
    enough. But we will have more.'

    Reports by the OSCE/ODIHR, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
    of Europe and domestic observation group It's Your Choice all made
    mention of the use of such groups of voters during the 2003
    parliamentary elections.


    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for the independent
    online ArmeniaNow weekly in Yerevan.
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