Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Pro-presidential parties set to win Armenia vote

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Pro-presidential parties set to win Armenia vote

    Pro-presidential parties set to win Armenia vote
    13 May 2007 11:24:19 GMT
    Source: Reuters

    By Margarita Antidze

    YEREVAN, May 13 (Reuters) - Pro-presidential parties have won a large
    majority in Armenia's parliamentary elections, the country's election
    commission said on Sunday, a vote Western monitors described as a vast
    democratic improvement.

    The expected winner in the election -- viewed as a dress rehearsal for
    the presidential vote next year -- is Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan
    who heads the Republican party, which is projected to win around 40
    percent of the vote.

    Sarksyan is a 52-year-old former welder and a trusted lieutenant of
    Armenia's President Robert Kocharyan who steps down as leader next
    year. He has said he would enter a presidential election if his party
    asked him to.

    "We were not expecting to get more than 50 percent of the vote as we
    had worthy opponents," Armen Ashotyan, a Republican member of
    parliament, told Reuters. "We are satisfied."

    The Republican party's two allies have polled around 35 percent
    together, the election commission said.

    Former Soviet Armenia is Russia's main ally in the Caucasus, nestling
    on the southern edge of the region which has emerged as a major
    transit route for oil from Central Asia to Europe, and also borders
    Turkey and Iran.

    International observers had urged it to improve the fairness of its
    parliamentary elections, saying the 2003 vote fell well short of
    democratic standards.

    Sarksyan had also pushed for improvements and at a news briefing on
    Sunday Western monitors said standards had risen.

    "The Armenian elections were an improvement from previous elections,"
    said Tone Tingsgaard, from the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) monitoring team.

    "Some issues remain and more is needed to consolidate this democracy."

    Observers highlighted the close relationship between businesses and
    politicians as a concern and an inadequate electoral complaints
    procedure. One of the pro-presidential parties is run by a millionaire
    businessman.

    A fringe opposition group which wants to start proceedings to impeach
    the president, because its says he has failed the country with his
    policies, is not expected to win enough votes to clear the 5 percent
    barrier and enter parliament.

    Nikol Pashinyan, one of the leaders of the Impeachment party, said
    there had been voting violations and he promised street
    demonstrations.

    "We do not recognise the result of the election and our struggle will
    shift to another stage," he said.

    Impeachment supporters and police had clashed in the election run up
    but on Sunday the streets of Armenia's capital were quiet. Impeachment
    has a few thousand supporters.

    Simmering tensions burst to the surface last month when gunmen tried
    to kill a senior member of the Republican party and two blasts ripped
    through the offices of another pro-presidential party.

    The violence has revived memories of a 1999 shootout in parliament
    that killed the speaker and the prime minister. (Additional reporting
    by Hasmik Lazarian)
Working...
X