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  • Another Opposition Party To Appeal Election Results

    ANOTHER OPPOSITION PARTY TO APPEAL ELECTION RESULTS
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 17 2007

    Aram Karapetian, a radical opposition leader, said on Thursday that
    his Nor Zhamanakner (New Times) will also ask Armenia's Constitutional
    Court to annul the official results of the parliamentary elections.

    According to the preliminary figures released by the Central Election
    Commission, Nor Zhamanakner won about 3.5 percent of the vote, failing
    to pass the 5 percent threshold for winning parliament seats under
    the proportional representation system.

    Karapetian said that his party got many more votes, alleging that
    they were deliberately miscounted by government-controlled election
    commissions across the country. "The authorities have given our votes
    to other pro-government parties," he told a news conference. Nor
    Zhamanakner will therefore demand a nationwide recount of ballots in
    its appeal to the Constitutional Court, he added.

    The pro-Russian oppositionist showed journalists what appeared to be
    evidence of a huge discrepancy between official results registered
    in a precinct in Charentsavan, a small town in central Armenia.

    According to the vote protocol released by the precinct commission,
    Nor Zhamanakner polled 111 votes there. However, the CEC data showed
    it getting only ten votes.

    Also planning to appeal the election results in the court are two
    other opposition parties that will be represented in the newly elected
    National Assembly. One of them, Orinats Yerkir, is also seeking a
    vote recount.

    Votes are currently being recounted only in some of the country's
    41 single-mandate districts. In one of them, covering much of the
    Aragatsotn province, the recount has found that a large number of
    ballots marked for opposition parties, including Nor Zhamanakner,
    were actually added to the vote tallies of the governing Republican
    Party (HHK) and other pro-government contenders.

    Karapetian repeated his and other radical oppositionists' allegations
    that the Armenian authorities also rigged the elections by issuing
    fake passports in the name of more than 400,000 voters absent from
    the country. He said those passports were given to other citizens who
    were bribed to vote for the HHK and the pro-presidential Prosperous
    Armenia Party (BHK).

    The Armenia authorities have shrugged off the allegations, insisting
    that the elections were free and fair. International observers have
    similarly concluded that they largely met democratic standards.

    In a written statement, the HHK said on Thursday that the conduct
    of the May 12 vote testified to the "irreversibility of democratic
    processes" in the country. The statement also thanked those Armenians
    who voted for the HHK.
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