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VoA: Armenian Voters Prepare to Elect New Parliament

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  • VoA: Armenian Voters Prepare to Elect New Parliament

    Voice of America
    May 11 2007

    Armenian Voters Prepare to Elect New Parliament
    By Lisa McAdams
    Moscow
    11 May 2007

    McAdams report - Download 868k
    Listen to McAdams report


    Armenians go to the polls this Saturday in a parliamentary election
    seen as a key test for democracy ahead of next year's presidential
    vote. VOA's Lisa McAdams in Moscow reports two pro-government
    parties are running strong against a field of nearly 20 opposition
    parties.


    Supporters of the Country of Law Party attend a campaign rally 06 May
    2007 in Yerevan, Armenia ahead of the 12 May 2007 parliamentary
    elections
    Armenia has not had an election deemed free and fair by international
    observers since gaining independence from the former Soviet Union in
    1991. This Saturday's vote will be closely watched.

    With elections for a new president just one year away, the
    international community has made it clear that is wants to see an
    improvement over Armenia's last parliamentary elections, in 2003,
    when there were widespread allegations of voter fraud.

    The United States says millions of dollars in aid to Armenia could be
    threatened if the election is deemed unfair. The European Union,
    Armenia's primary trading partner, also says a fair election is
    necessary for Armenia to continue participating in its European
    Neighborhood Policy program.

    Yevgeni Volk, the Director of the Heritage Foundation's Moscow
    office, says Armenia's authorities know they must produce a better
    parliamentary election than in 2003. But either way, he says, the
    country is destined for change.

    "Whoever wins in the election, even those forces mostly associated
    with Russia, I believe that they will have to review their policies
    toward more openness toward the European Union and NATO, just because
    Russia can not offer Armenia reliable, economic and political
    prospects for the future," he noted.

    Volk notes that more than 30 percent of Armenia's 3 million people
    live on less than $2 a day. Discontent is high, he says, but so too
    is voter apathy.

    Despite growing discontent, few of Armenia's opposition parties are
    expected to secure the five percent threshold needed to join
    parliament. Volk and other analysts say that is because the
    political opposition made a tactical error in failing to unite under
    a single anti-government banner.

    Opposition leaders are already warning of possible fraud in
    Saturday's election and say they will organize mass street protests,
    if they consider the vote unfair.

    Analyst Volk says much will depend on the election results.

    "If the margin between the winners and losers will be narrow, I
    believe it will really cause some kinds of protests and violence,
    which will be difficult to deal with," he added. "If the gap will be
    larger, I believe the opposition will feel weaker."

    There have already been several incidents of election-related
    violence leading up to Saturday's vote and, in the final week of
    campaigning, authorities in Armenia announced the arrest of
    opposition activist Alexander Arzumanian on money-laundering charges.

    The arrest significantly raised opposition fears that the upcoming
    parliamentary vote will be neither free, nor fair. Pro-government
    parties deny there will be falsification and say voters will back the
    government's record.

    Two pro-government parties, the ruling Republican Party of Armenia,
    led by presidential favorite Serge Sarkisian, and the Prosperous
    Armenia party of Gagik Tsarukian, are expected to sweep the election.


    The outcome of Saturday's election is likely to dictate the course of
    the country's presidential vote in 2008. Sarkisian, the acting prime
    minister and President Robert Kocharyan's friend and favored
    successor, is expected by analysts to easily defeat the opposition
    when voters in go to the polls next year.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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