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Armenians Vote In Presidential Election Marred By Shooting

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  • Armenians Vote In Presidential Election Marred By Shooting

    ARMENIANS VOTE IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION MARRED BY SHOOTING

    Financial Mirror
    Feb 18 2013

    Armenians voted in a presidential election on Monday that is likely
    to hand incumbent Serzh Sarksyan a new five-year term, but the lack
    of any serious opposition and an assassination attempt on one of his
    rivals cast a shadow over the election.

    Opinion polls suggest Sarksyan's victory is all but certain. He is on
    target to win more than 60% of the votes in the small, landlocked
    country in the South Caucasus, with the next of the other six
    candidates barely in double figures.

    Sarksyan's supporters hope an election free of the violence and fraud
    that marred the last presidential poll in 2008, when ten people were
    killed in clashes, would show the world the former Soviet republic
    is on the path to economic recovery after years of war and upheaval.

    Political stability was a concern among a steady trickle of voters
    who headed to a polling station at a children's daycare centre in
    the capital, Yerevan.

    But with none of Sarksyan serious rivals in the opposition choosing
    to stand in the race, election observers expressed concerns over the
    democratic credentials of the vote.

    Officials from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    said they found apathy towards the election and a lack of confidence
    about the electoral process among the public when they visited the
    country in January.

    There are also questions about security in a country that is locked
    in a dispute with neighbouring Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh,
    an ethnic Armenian-majority enclave inside Azerbaijan over which
    Armenians and Azeris fought a war in the 1990s. Sarksyan, 59, like
    many of his generation, is a veteran of that war.

    Tensions over the mountainous enclave still pose a threat to peace
    in a region where pipelines take Caspian oil and natural gas to Europe.

    Concerns about instability were underlined in an attempt to kill
    Paruyr Hayrikyan, 63, an outsider in the election. He was shot in
    the shoulder on January 31.

    Another outsider in the race, Andrias Ghukasyan, has been on a hunger
    strike since the start of the campaign to press demands for Sarksyan's
    candidacy to be annulled and for international observers to boycott
    the vote.

    A third candidate, Arman Melikyan, has said he will not vote on Monday
    because he believes the election will be slanted in the president's
    favour. Other potential candidates did not take part in the race for
    similar reasons.

    International observers from the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) are monitoring polls, which opened at
    8 a.m. (0400 GMT) and close at 8 p.m. (1600 GMT).

    The first exit polls are expected a few hours after polls close and
    official results on Tuesday at 8 p.m.

    http://www.financialmirror.com/news-details.php?nid=28867

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