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Decision 2013: `Day of Silence' descends on Armenia ahead of preside

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  • Decision 2013: `Day of Silence' descends on Armenia ahead of preside

    Decision 2013: `Day of Silence' descends on Armenia ahead of presidential ballot

    VOTE 2013 | 16.02.13 | 19:37




    By SUREN MUSAYELYAN
    ArmeniaNow Deputy Editor


    The last election rhetoric has been fading away, giving way to what is
    going to be observed as a Day of Silence on Sunday to give voting-age
    Armenians some time to digest the multitude of pledges before going to
    the polls and casting their ballots in favor of one of the seven
    candidates hoping to become their president.

    The top contenders, including incumbent president Serzh Sargsyan and
    his main challengers - Heritage Party leader Raffi Hovannisian and
    former Prime Minister Hrant Bagratyan - staged their final campaign
    rallies and events on the last days of the four-week campaign, calling
    on their supporters for one last time to vote for their programs and
    the future of Armenia.

    The three were the candidates who talked more about their programs
    during the electioneering period that was described by some
    international monitors as `low-key' and with `limited visibility'.

    Sargsyan toured around the country, meeting constituencies and calling
    on the nation to support his `Towards a Secure Armenia' program, while
    Hovannisian opted for a more personal approach, doing something that
    no candidate in previous Armenian elections has done.

    On his frequent campaign outings in Yerevan and other towns and rural
    communities across Armenia the United States-born politician randomly
    greeted people, shaking hands with them and talking to them in the
    streets, shops and other public places, thus spreading his five-step
    plan and vision.

    Bagratyan, another opposition figure in the campaign, also made a few
    trips to the provinces, holding meetings with people in towns and
    rural communities to present his 100-step program that he says is the
    only economically sound plan to rebuild the nation.

    The campaign was marred by an assassination attempt against another
    opposition contender, Paruyr Hayrikyan. The Soviet-era dissident
    survived a shooting attack on January 31 and had to stay in hospital,
    recovering from a gunshot wound, through most of the rest of the
    campaign. Despite considering his ailment to be an `insurmountable
    obstacle' to his campaign, Hayrikyan eventually decided not to ask the
    Constitutional Court to postpone the ballot for two weeks - something
    that he was eligible to do under the law. He later said he had chosen
    not to play into the hands of the `terrorists' whose primary aim in
    shooting him, he said, was to disrupt the electoral process in
    Armenia. (The candidate's hesitation and some `irrational' moves,
    however, led critics to suspect a deal with the government).

    Another reason cited by Hayrikyan was to save an election rival,
    Andrias Ghukasyan, the trouble of going through an additional two
    weeks of hunger strike which he said would have killed the 42-year-old
    political analyst.

    Ghukasyan, who runs a private radio station in Yerevan, embarked on an
    open-ended hunger strike at the start of the campaign on January 21,
    staging his action just outside the National Academy of Sciences
    building in the city center under a sign that read: `Stop Fake
    Elections'. The candidate, who is known for his previous civic
    activism, demanded that the Central Election Commission repeal the
    electoral registration of incumbent President Sargsyan and that
    international observers boycott the Armenian election. Despite
    experiencing some health problems during the third week of his hunger
    strike, the candidate refused to give it up and go to hospital, nor
    did he follow the example of another little-known candidate, Aram
    Harutyunyan, who formally withdrew his nomination on February 8.

    The two other candidates whose names will appear on the ballot paper
    on Monday conducted mostly low-key campaigns or no campaigns at all.
    Arman Melikyan, who formerly served as Karabakh's foreign minister,
    has, in his own words, pushed for a legitimate election putting
    emphasis on the accuracy of voter lists, declaring that he won't go to
    the polls on February 18, nor will he recognize the outcome of the
    ballot.

    Another maverick candidate, Vardan Sedrakyan, who had declared himself
    to be an expert on Armenian epic poetry well before the start of the
    campaign, spent most of the time giving press conferences and
    interviews, expressing at times controversial views on domestic and
    foreign policy matters, and only occasionally appearing in public. In
    the last few days of the campaign the candidate found himself on the
    receiving end of lingering suspicions of his having some kind of
    involvement in the attack on Hayrikyan as the two suspects arrested by
    the National Security Service turned out to be individuals he had
    hired to do some house renovation work for him in the past.

    The Armenian presidential election is held according to a
    double-ballot system with a possibility of a runoff if none of the
    candidates manages to poll more than 50 percent of the vote the first
    time around. Such a runoff is held between the top two finishers two
    weeks after the first ballot.

    Authorities estimate the number of eligible voters in Armenia at
    around 2.5 million, admittedly including between 500,000 and 700,000
    citizens who are currently outside Armenia and, in accordance with the
    country's current legislation, are not eligible to vote.

    The highest voter turnouts observed in Armenian presidential elections
    were during the first and last post-independence ballots - in 1991 and
    2008, when about 70 percent went to the polls. Reported turnout
    figures during the three presidential polls in-between fluctuated
    between 50 and 65 percent.

    A total of 1,988 polling stations will be open across Armenia from
    8.00 am to 8.00 pm on February 18 for eligible voters to come and cast
    their ballots. The Central Election Commission (CEC) is expected to
    update turnout figures several times during the day, with early
    results of the vote due the next morning. The preliminary report of
    the CEC (www.elections.am) on the ballot is due within 22 hours after
    polling stations close - i.e. 6 pm on February 19. The final results
    of the presidential election are to be announced on February 25.

    A number of international and local organizations will be monitoring
    the Monday vote, with the largest international mission, OSCE/ODIHR,
    deploying 250 short-term observers on Election Day to join 13 election
    experts and 24 long-term observers working in Armenia during the
    campaign.

    The mission is due to come up with a report evaluating the compliance
    of the Armenian election with the nation's commitments to democracy
    and international standards of holding elections - an assessment that
    serves as a guideline for many governments and institutions in the
    world.


    From: Baghdasarian
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