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Hundreds Protest 'Rigged' Vote In Armenian Town

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  • Hundreds Protest 'Rigged' Vote In Armenian Town

    HUNDREDS PROTEST 'RIGGED' VOTE IN ARMENIAN TOWN
    By Irina Hovannisian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 17 2007

    Hundreds of people rallied in a small Armenian town for a second
    consecutive day on Thursday in protest against serious fraud which
    they said decided the outcome of a parliamentary election held in
    their constituency.

    The protesters were supporters of Talin's Mayor Mnatsakan
    Mnatsakanian who ran for parliament in the local single-mandate
    electoral district as an independent and was narrowly defeated
    by his main rival representing the governing Republican Party of
    Armenia (HHK). According to the district election commission, the
    HHK candidate, Khachik Manukian, won by a margin of 162 votes.

    Mnatsakanian refused to concede defeat, demanding a vote recount in
    three local villages where Manukian's supporters allegedly stuffed
    ballots and resorted to other irregularities. Recounting of ballots
    cast in those villages on the party list basis exposed major violations
    that benefited the HHK and the pro-presidential Prosperous Armenia
    (BHK).

    The refusal by the district commission to recount ballots cast for
    individual candidates as well sparked angry street protests in Talin
    late Wednesday. Dozens of baton-wielding police, reinforced by special
    security forces sent from Yerevan, were deployed the next day in and
    outside the main local government building, which also houses the
    election body.

    The unusually strong police presence only added to the protesters'
    fury. "Why are they holding truncheons?" said on one of them. "To
    beat the people? They only prove that this is a dictatorship. Will
    the people be wrong to mount an uprising after this?"

    In the meantime, Mnatsakanian's proxies tried in vain to get the
    commission chairman, Hovannes Asatrian, to call an emergency meeting
    of the body and consider their demand backed by four of its nine
    members. Asatrian told RFE/RL that he is delaying the meeting for
    lack of a quorum, which is not required by Armenia's recently amended
    Election Code.

    "There is quorum," countered another commission member. "All commission
    members are in the building."

    Mnatsakanian then unexpectedly withdrew his demand after consulting
    with his HHK-affiliated deputy Gabriel Avetisian behind the closed
    doors. The mayor declined a comment, while Avetisian claimed that the
    defeated candidate gave up because of a legal deadline for recounting
    which expired an hour later. He denied that the Talin mayor, whose
    rival was personally endorsed by Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian,
    faced pressure from Yerevan.

    In spite of that, the angry crowd which waited outside the building
    did not immediately disperse. "We are thinking about ourselves,
    not about Mnatsakanian," explained one man. "Our votes were stolen."

    "The people of Talin must not participate in the [2008] presidential
    elections," said another.

    Many of the protesters agreed.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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