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Opposition Leader Backs 'Anti-Fraud' Appeal To Court

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  • Opposition Leader Backs 'Anti-Fraud' Appeal To Court

    OPPOSITION LEADER BACKS 'ANTI-FRAUD' APPEAL TO COURT
    Nare Stepanian, Irina Hovhannisyan

    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24567863.html
    02.05.2012

    Armenia - Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian is embraced by a
    supporter during an election campaign event in Yerevan, 1 May 2012.

    Raffi Hovannisian, the leader of the Zharangutyun (Heritage),
    voiced support on Wednesday for an election-related appeal to the
    Constitutional Court filed by two other major opposition groups and
    the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK).

    Hovannisian said the BHK, the Armenian National Congress (HAK) and
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) are right to
    demand that electoral authorities publish the lists of voters who
    will have cast their ballots in Sunday's parliamentary elections.

    The three political forces say that this is essential for preventing
    fraudulent voting in favor of the ruling Republican Party (HHK) and
    that Armenia's allegedly inflated voter registers allow the authorities
    to resort to such falsifications. They want the Constitutional Court
    to declare unconstitutional a legal provision that bans election
    commissions from publicizing the names of actual voters.

    The court is expected to consider and rule on the appeal on Saturday.

    The HHK has rejected the opposition demand backed by Zharangutyun,
    saying that releasing those lists would breach the secrecy of ballot.

    "In our opinion, that is not a violation of the secrecy of ballot,"
    Hovannisian told reporters in the northern city of Vanadzor.

    "Therefore, we agree with the demands presented by our partners
    to the Constitutional Court. We hope that the court will make the
    right decision."

    A BHK leader, Vartan Oskanian, spoke last week of "tens of thousands
    of inaccuracies" which he said his party has found in national
    voter rolls. He claimed that those include names of bogus voters
    simultaneously registered at various electoral districts with slightly
    altered names.

    Levon Zurabian, an HAK leader, pointed to an "abnormally" large
    number of households with ten or more registered voters. He said
    HAK campaigners have also detected voters listed as residents of
    non-existent or abandoned apartments buildings in Yerevan.

    Garnik Sahakian, a Zharangutyun candidate in a single-mandate
    constituency in Vanadzor, likewise complained about the lists available
    on the Internet. "There is an apartment with 27 registered voters,"
    he said. "But I went there I didn't find those residents."

    The head of Armenia's largest election-monitoring organization,
    It's Your Choice, expressed similar concerns at a news conference
    in Yerevan on Wednesday. Harutiun Hambardzumian reported instances
    of a disproportionately large number of voters registered in single
    apartments or at non-existent addresses. "There are streets that I
    haven't heard about before," he said.

    Still, Hambardzumian was by and large satisfied with the course of the
    current election campaign, saying that it has been remarkably peaceful
    and orderly. There have been few instances of government officials
    and loyalists bullying voters, attacking opposition campaigners or
    obstructing their campaigning, he said.

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