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Observers say Armenia election meets international standards

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  • Observers say Armenia election meets international standards

    International Herald tribune, France
    May 13 2007


    Observers say Armenia election meets international standards
    By C.J. Chivers Published: May 13, 2007


    MOSCOW: Parliamentary elections in Armenia largely complied with
    international standards, marking the first positive assessment of an
    election in the former Soviet state since it gained independence in
    1991, Western election observers said Sunday.

    A coalition of pro-government parties took a strong majority in the
    131-seat National Assembly, according to preliminary election
    results, giving a victory to Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan, who is
    regarded as the principal contender in the presidential race next
    year.

    Elections in much of the former Soviet space have routinely been
    rigged since the collapse of communism. The results announced Sunday
    in Yerevan, the Armenian capital, came after intense diplomatic
    pressure against Armenia to avoid another flawed poll. The United
    States had threatened to withhold foreign aid if serious
    irregularities were repeated, while the European Union had said it
    would scale back its relations.

    Opposition parties held public rallies during the campaign without
    police harassment and were allowed free air time on public television
    - signs of an open campaign that have often been suppressed in other
    former Soviet states.

    "We saw the way in which serious efforts by the authorities to
    address problems that marred previous elections can result in a
    healthier election campaign," said Boris Frlec, the head of the
    long-term observer mission from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe.

    Sargsyan hailed the results and the observers' assessment.

    "I am happy that the international observers have acknowledged that
    these were the best elections ever held in Armenia in its 15 years of
    independence," he said in an e-mail message.

    While the observers commended an improvement from past elections,
    they noted that shortfalls remain and that there were isolated
    reports of fraud and double voting. Opposition parties said that many
    votes had been bought.

    A small protest began in the capital as opposition parties claimed to
    have evidence of irregularities. There were no immediate reports of
    arrests or violence, and the protest quickly fizzled in the rain.
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