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Armenia Seeks Major Curbs On Western Vote Monitoring

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  • Armenia Seeks Major Curbs On Western Vote Monitoring

    ARMENIA SEEKS MAJOR CURBS ON WESTERN VOTE MONITORING
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 26 2007

    Armenia has joined Russia, Belarus and four Central Asian states in
    demanding serious restrictions on the often troublesome Western
    monitoring of their elections, the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe confirmed on Friday. The OSCE's
    election-monitoring arm, the Warsaw-based Office for Democratic
    Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), said it is bewildered by
    Yerevan's decision to back the move just months before Armenia's
    crucial presidential election.

    Under proposals tabled by Russia to the OSCE's Vienna-based governing
    council on September 18, the ODIHR-led election observer missions
    deployed in OSCE member states would comprise no more than 50
    people. They would be barred from assessing the conduct of those
    elections before the announcement of their official results. More
    importantly, the Russian proposals, would enable the OSCE's 56 member
    governments to influence the content of observer reports. The Russian
    initiative, backed by Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
    Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, came in advance of Russia's December
    2 parliamentary elections and presidential vote scheduled for
    next March. Moscow has yet to formally invite the OSCE to monitor
    the polls. Although this is not the first time Armenia endorses
    Russian criticism of OSCE efforts at democracy building in the
    former Soviet Union, its latest move is somewhat unexpected given
    Western observers' largely positive assessment of its May 2007
    parliamentary elections. The vote was monitored by more than 200 OSCE
    representatives. The previous Armenian parliamentary and presidential
    elections were criticized by the OSCE as undemocratic. "We observed
    elections in Armenia earlier this year and Armenia did not have
    any problems with the number of our observers and their findings,"
    ODIHR spokeswoman Urdur Gunnarsdottir told RFE/RL. "So we don't see
    any good reason why Armenia would support such a proposal now."

    Gunnarsdottir said the head of the ODIHR, Christian Strohal, raised
    the issue with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian and other Armenian
    official during a visit to Yerevan earlier this week. Official Armenian
    sources made no mention of this, saying only that Strohal discussed
    preparations for the upcoming presidential elections.

    Echoing arguments made by Russian officials, a spokesman for the
    Armenian Foreign Ministry said Yerevan supports the proposed
    restrictions on OSCE vote monitoring "in the light of ongoing
    reforms of the OSCE." "Armenia is actively involved in the process
    of reforms and believes it is important that the organization become
    more representative, transparent and equal for everyone," Vladimir
    Karapetian told RFE/RL. The United States criticized the Russian
    proposals on Thursday. "The U.S. would not want to see ODIHR's
    effectiveness weakened under the guise of 'reform,"' said Kyle
    Scott, deputy chief of the U.S. mission to the OSCE. "The Russian
    proposals do nothing to strengthen its work." "From the point of
    view of an election observer, it is not a good proposal and flies in
    the face of what we have been doing for the last ten years," agreed
    Gunnarsdottir. "I don't really see why there is a need to limit the
    number of observers and their ability to speak about their findings."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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