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Armenians Re-Elect Their President, Debate Level Of Fraud

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  • Armenians Re-Elect Their President, Debate Level Of Fraud

    ARMENIANS RE-ELECT THEIR PRESIDENT, DEBATE LEVEL OF FRAUD

    Voice of America
    Feb 19 2013

    YEREVAN, ARMENIA - As Armenians debated their presidential election,
    European observers gave cautious endorsements to the Monday vote that
    re-elected President Serzh Sargsyan.

    "This election showed improvement, but lacked genuine competition,"
    said Tonino Picula, head of the parliamentary observer team of the
    Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

    More encouraging words came from Karin Woldseth, leader of observers
    from the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly.

    "Armenia is on the right track to fulfill their obligations as
    a new democratic country in Europe," said Woldseth, a Norwegian
    parliamentarian.

    Then protesters stormed the press conference.

    "You're legitimizing an illegal vote by your declarations!" shouted
    one protester, Artur Minasian.

    By the official count, the President won 59 percent of the vote. His
    closest rival, U.S.-born former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovhannisyan,
    won 37 percent.

    On Tuesday, people in Yerevan debated this question: was the fraud
    big enough to cover a gap of 22 percentage points?

    Yes, said opposition candidate Hovhannisyan who addressed hundreds
    of supporters gathered on Liberty Square.

    "The voting results do not reflect the Armenian citizens' will,"
    Hovannisyan said. "The elections involved mass irregularities. I am
    the president-elect of Armenia."

    He gave Mr. Sargsyan until Wednesday to concede defeat. He promised
    another rally that day.

    'Rampant violations'

    Hovhannisyan supporters said they have hundreds of reports of illegal
    ballot stuffing or fraudulent ballot counting.

    Sara Anjargolian, a lawyer at the rally, said she read reports of
    voting violations on Facebook pages of human rights groups, then
    went to Hovhannisyan's headquarters to read reports coming in from
    voting stations.

    "There were rampant violations - everything from ballot stuffing,
    and not one or two, but hundreds and hundreds and hundreds that were
    being stuffed for the sitting president," she said. "And intimidation.

    Everything under the sun."

    But Eduard Sharmazanov, spokesman for Mr. Sargsyan's ruling Republican
    Party, called the vote "the best in the history of independent
    Armenia."

    Political analysts noted that last May, the Republican Party won
    52 percent of seats in Armenia's parliament. More recently, all
    pre-election polls indicated that voters heavily favored President
    Sargsyan. After polls closed Monday night, a Gallup exit poll gave the
    president 58 percent of votes cast. On Tuesday morning, the Central
    Elections Commission gave him 58.64 percent.

    Moscow approves

    On Tuesday, the clearest election endorsement came from Armenia's
    closest ally, Russia.

    Sergei Lebedev, a former director of Russia's Foreign Intelligence
    Service, headed a team of observers sent here from other former
    Soviet nations.

    "Some minor irregularities that were spotted could not have affected
    the overall results of the presidential election," Lebedev said.

    Armenia's presidential election "fully meets generally recognized
    international norms and national electoral law," he said.

    Lebedev said violations were spotted but not enough to affect the
    overall results of the presidential election. He concluded that
    Armenia's election fully meets generally recognized international law.

    Russia maintains 5,000 troops in Armenia. On Tuesday, Russian President
    Vladimir Putin telephoned President Sargsyan to congratulate him on
    his reelection.

    http://www.voanews.com/content/armenian-president-reelected/1606349.html

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