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Armenia chooses new parliament amid opposition worries about results

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  • Armenia chooses new parliament amid opposition worries about results

    Armenia chooses new parliament amid opposition worries about
    potentially false results
    AVET DEMOURIAN, AP Worldstream
    Published: May 12, 2007


    Armenia voted for a new parliament Saturday in elections dominated by
    concerns about economic issues in the poor and landlocked ex-Soviet
    republic and by opposition fears that officials will falsify the
    results.

    All 131 seats in the National Assembly are up for grabs _ 90 to be
    chosen according to proportions that parties get nationwide and the
    other 41 in single-mandate contests.

    The last parliamentary election, in 2003, was assessed by Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe observers as falling short of
    international democratic standards. But a preliminary report from the
    OSCE's elections-monitoring office on this year's campaign did not
    point to significant problems.

    National media reports on the campaign have been "generally devoid of
    negative reporting," the report said. The OSCE frequently criticizes
    elections in post-Soviet countries for media reports that either ignore
    opposition forces or portray them unfairly.

    However, the report did raise concerns about one pre-election report,
    when a newspaper obtained a secretly recorded tape of a conversation
    between the leader of the Orinats Yerkir opposition party and a British
    Embassy official. The party leader, Artur Bagdasarian, reportedly says
    he is seeking to have the international community give a poor
    assessment of the vote.

    President Robert Kocharian subsequently said Bagdasarian's comments
    could be considered as treason.

    Bagdasarian on Saturday said, "We already have signals of violations,"
    including the disappearance of ballots.

    But Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian said, "I hope this election will be
    for the people and for the observers the best in Armenia's history. ...
    I don't think there will be falsifications."

    Opinion polls indicate the top parties are likely to be Sarkisian's
    Republican Party and the Prosperous Armenia Party, each appearing
    positioned to get about 30 percent of the vote.

    Prosperous Armenia is a comparatively new player on the political
    scene, having been formed in 2004, and its origins are unclear. Some
    observers suggest it was formed at Kocharian's initiative as a way to
    have a counterbalance to the Republican Party.

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation, which has been the Republican
    Party's partner in forming a parliamentary majority, is seen as likely
    getting third place.

    National turnout at noon, four hours after the polls opened, was
    reported at 10.5 percent, but lines were seen outside many polling
    stations, indicating participation could accelerate.

    All the main parties call for addressing economic and social problems,
    including ways to increase the population of about 2.9 million. The
    country's population has dropped sharply in the post-Soviet period as
    the birthrate declined and an estimated 900,000 people emigrated,
    largely due to manifest economic problems.

    The tiny South Caucasus nation has few natural resources and its
    economic development is further restricted by the closing of its
    borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey _ both of which were closed in
    protest of ethnic Armenian troops taking control of Nagorno-Karabakh, a
    territory in Azerbaijan, during a six-year conflict in the early 1990s.

    Armenia refused to grant visas to eight Turkish observers who wanted to
    come as part of the OSCE's election mission.

    After police clashed with opposition demonstrators at a gathering in
    the capital, Yerevan, this week, opposition concerns that the
    authorities will manipulate the election results have risen and
    activists have promised to take to the streets if that happens.

    "If they once again try to falsify the elections, we will call all our
    fellow citizens to come into the center of Yerevan" on Sunday, Aram
    Sarkisian, leader of the opposition Republic Party , was quoted by the
    newspaper Kommersant as saying this week. Sarkisian is unrelated to the
    leader of the Republican Party.
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