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Dashnaks Sign 'Contracts' With Gyumri Voters

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  • Dashnaks Sign 'Contracts' With Gyumri Voters

    DASHNAKS SIGN 'CONTRACTS' WITH GYUMRI VOTERS
    Satenik Vantsian

    Armenialiberty.org
    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24304712.html
    Aug 22, 2011

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) has started
    signing symbolic contracts with voters in Gyumri as part of a public
    campaign against electoral fraud that was announced by the opposition
    party early this year.

    >>From a red tent pitched in a major city square on Saturday,
    Dashnaktsutyun activists are urging local residents to pledge, in
    writing, to vote in the next elections to be held in Armenia.

    "What we want to do is to convince every citizen and voter, to make
    them understand that they must definitely take part in elections,"
    one of the activists, Aram Hakobian, told RFE/RL's Armenian service
    (Azatutyun.am) on Monday.

    "Between 200,000 and 300,000 people don't take part in elections and
    that failure to vote makes it possible for others to vote in their
    place," he said, referring to what is widely seen as a key source of
    chronic vote irregularities in the country.

    According to Hakobian, more than 400 Gyumri voters have already signed
    such contracts.

    Most locals walking by the Dashnaktsutyun stand on Monday morning
    seemed indifferent to the campaign, though. And some of those who
    took notice were skeptical about its success.

    "If this action serves its purpose that will be great, but everyone
    here is bribed," said one middle-aged man.

    "They are just wasting paper," another voter said after signing a
    contract. "I'm in favor of some change. But by whom? That I don't
    know."

    Dashnaktsutyun launched the campaign called "A Vote is Power" last
    February with the stated aim of facilitating the proper conduct of the
    next presidential, parliamentary and local elections. Party leaders
    said it will focus on raising public awareness of electoral rights
    and discouraging Armenians from selling their votes.

    Vote buying, banned by Armenian law, has been widespread in the
    country since the 1990s.

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders also said in February that they are ready
    to cooperate with all other opposition forces, including the rival
    Armenian National Congress (HAK), in preventing vote rigging.

    The HAK shrugged off the campaign at the time, saying that
    Dashnaktsutyun has no moral right to campaign for free and fair
    elections because it has recognized official results of disputed
    ballots held since the late 1990s.

    Dashnaktsutyun representatives countered that the first reputedly
    fraudulent national elections were held in 1995 and 1996 when Armenia
    was governed by President Levon Ter-Petrosian, the HAK's top leader.

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