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Armenian Pro-President Parties Win Parliament Vote

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  • Armenian Pro-President Parties Win Parliament Vote

    Javno, Croatia
    May 19 2007


    Armenian Pro-President Parties Win Parliament Vote


    Armenian parties loyal to President Robert Kocharyan won a large
    majority in last week's parliamentary election.

    Armenian parties loyal to President Robert Kocharyan won a large
    majority in last week's parliamentary election, the central election
    commission said on Saturday, citing the first official results.

    The Republican party, led by Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan who is the
    favoured successor to Kocharyan, won 65 seats in the 131-seat
    parliament, according to election officials.

    The pro-presidential Prosperous Armenia party came second with 25
    seats followed by Dashnaktsutiun with 16.

    Opposition parties Orinats Yerkir (Country of laws) won 9 and
    Heritage won 7 seats.

    The vote, which took place last Saturday, is regarded as a test of
    democracy in the Caucasian country and a dress rehearsal for a
    presidential contest early next year when Kocharyan, 52, will step
    down at the end of his second five-year term.

    Sarksyan, also 52, was the focus of his party's campaign. "I ask for
    your vote of confidence" was his slogan at election rallies.

    He said this week that if he was put forward by the party to take
    part in the presidential election, he would accept.

    About 1.4 million of the 2.3 million electorate cast their vote. It
    was the first election former Soviet Armenia has held that Western
    observers said was fair.

    FAIR ELECTION

    Voters gave credit to Kocharyan's allies for the years of strong
    economic growth he has overseen, analysts said.

    The opposition is divided and its members say they are not given fair
    treatment on tightly controlled television.

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said
    the election was largely conducted in accordance with international
    standards for democratic elections.

    "The biggest success is that international observers gave a high
    evaluation of our elections," Tigran Torosyan, deputy head of the
    Republican Party, told Reuters.

    "The election results showed that society gives high marks to done
    deeds and not simply to words."

    A spokesman for the Heritage party said the opposition was preparing
    to appeal in the constitutional court against the election results.

    "New ways of breaching (electoral rules) were implemented, for which
    neither observers nor the party were ready," said Hovsep Khurshudyan.


    Armenia, bordered by Azerbaijan, Turkey, Georgia and Iran, relies
    heavily on financial and moral support from a huge diaspora in
    Russia, western Europe and the United States.

    The country lies in the Caucasus mountains, a region that is subject
    to competition for influence by major powers seeking influence over
    the transit route for oil exports from the Caspian Sea. Armenia has
    no pipelines of its own.

    Armenia fought a still-unresolved war with neighbouring Azerbaijan in
    the early 1990s over Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory populated by
    ethnic Armenians which broke away from mainly Muslim Azerbaijan at
    the end of Soviet rule.
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