Observation of the parliamentary elections in Armenia (6 May 2012)
Election observation report
| Doc. 12937
| 24 May 2012
1 Introduction
1. On 23 January 2012, the Bureau of the Parliamentary
Assembly decided – in principle and subject to the reception of
an invitation from the competent national authorities of Armenia
– to observe the parliamentary elections in that country, on 6 May
2012. It decided to set up an ad hoc committee for this purpose,
comprising 30 members. It also authorised a pre-electoral mission
to take place approximately one month before this election.
2. On 2 March 2012, Mr Samvel Nikoyan, President of the National
Assembly of the Republic of Armenia, invited the Parliamentary Assembly
to observe the parliamentary elections.
3. At its meeting on 8 March 2012, the Bureau of the Assembly
took note of the declarations on conflict of interest of the candidates
for the observation mission, approved the composition of the ad
hoc committee and appointed me as its Chairperson. At its meeting
on 23 April 2012, the Bureau approved the final composition of the
ad hoc committee (see Appendix 1).
4. In accordance with Article 15 of the co-operation agreement
signed on 4 October 2004 between the Parliamentary Assembly and
the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission),
Mr Serhii Kalchenko and Mr Gaël Martin-Micallef were invited to
join the ad hoc committee as legal advisers.
5. The pre-electoral mission visited Yerevan on 11 and 12 April
2012, in order to assess the state of preparations and the political
climate in the run-up to the parliamentary elections of 6 May 2012
(see the programme of the visit in Appendix 2). The delegation met
with the President of Armenia, the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs,
the President of the National Assembly, the Chairperson of the Central
Electoral Commission (CEC), the Deputy Head of the National Police,
representatives of the main political parties running in these elections,
representatives of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the
media, the Head of the election observation mission of the Office
for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights of the Organization
for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR) and diplomats
in Yerevan.
6. The findings of the pre-electoral mission are reflected in
its statement (see Appendix 3).
7. The ad hoc committee, which met in Yerevan from 4 to 7 May
2012, acted as part of the International Election Observation Mission
(IEOM), which also included the election observation missions of
the OSCE/ODIHR, led by Ms Radmila Šekerinska, of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Organisation for Co-operation and Security in Europe
(OSCE-PA), led by Mr François-Xavier de Donnea and of the European
Parliament, led by Mr Krzysztof Lisek. The cooperation between the
four partners was excellent.
8. The ad hoc committee held meetings with representatives of
the political parties, the Chair of the Central Electoral Commission,
with the Head of the Election Observation Mission of the OSCE/ODIHR
and her staff, as well as with members of the diplomatic corps in
Yerevan, and representatives of civil society and the mass media
(see the programme of the ad hoc committee in Appendix 4).
9. On election day, the ad hoc committee split into 13 teams,
which observed the elections in and around Yerevan, as well as in
the regions of Armavir, Ejmiatsin, Aragatsotn, Shirak, Vanadzor,
Ararat et Vayots Dzor.
10. The joint press conference of the IEOM took place on Monday
7 May 2012. A statement of preliminary findings and conclusions
was published, as well as a joint press release (see the joint press
release in Appendix 5).
11. The ad hoc committee wishes to thank the Armenian authorities,
in particular the National Assembly, for the support and co-operation
extended to the ad hoc committee in accomplishing its mission.
2 Political
and legal context
12. The 6 May parliamentary elections were called by
President Serzh Sargsyan on 23 February 2012. The last parliamentary
elections were held in May 2007, when the Republican Party of Armenia
(RPA), led by President Sargsyan, and Prosperous Armenia emerged
as the dominant forces, with 63 and 22 mandates respectively in
a 131-seat parliament. These two parties formed the government,
together with the Rule of Law party. The other two parliamentary
parties were the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and Heritage. The
Armenian National Congress (ANC), a coalition led by former president
Levon Ter-Petrosyan, was not represented in the parliament, even
though it was a major political force.
13. The Constitution of Armenia guarantees the fundamental rights
and freedoms for democratic elections, but there are inconsistencies
with international standards, such as a five-year citizenship and
residency requirement for candidates and the disenfranchisement
of all prisoners, regardless of the severity of the crime committed.
14. A new Electoral Code was adopted in May 2011 and, despite
some shortcomings, it generally provides a sound framework for the
conduct of democratic elections. It offers a number of significant
improvements, some based on previous recommendations of the Council
of Europe’s European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice
Commission) and the OSCE/ODIHR. It is important to note that the
fair and proper implementation of the new Electoral Code is just
as crucial as the law itself.
15. Parliamentary elections are held under a parallel, mixed electoral
system. Of the 131 members of parliament, 90 are elected under a
proportional system in a nationwide constituency. The thresholds
for the allocation of mandates are 5% of the votes cast for parties
and 7% for blocs. The remaining 41 deputies are elected in single-mandate
constituencies.
3 Election administration
and voter and candidate registration
16. The elections were administered by a three-tiered
system of election commissions: the Central Election Commission
(CEC), 41 Territorial Election Commissions (TECs) and 1 982 Precinct
Election commissions (PECs). Each election commission consists of
seven members. Parties, one registered bloc and candidates could
appoint proxies.
17. Under the new Electoral Code, the CEC and the TECs are no
longer appointed based on party nominations. PECs are temporary
bodies and these were formed by 11 April 2012. Two PEC members were appointed
by the TECs and each parliamentary party appointed one of the remaining
five members of each PEC. The ANC, as an extra-parliamentary force,
could not appoint members to the PECs.
18. Before election day, the process was administered in an overall
professional and efficient manner. Proxies, observers and media
representatives received the necessary information and had access
to the CEC and TEC sessions. Legal deadlines were met. However,
decisions were taken by the CEC and TECs with limited open discussion,
thereby reducing transparency.
19. 19. The CEC provided information on the voting procedures
on television and by posters and leaflets, and it organised nationwide
training for the majority of TEC and PEC members.
20. The Passport and Visa Department of the police is responsible
for the permanent maintenance of a nationwide electronic voter register,
based on the population register, which is updated on a regular
basis. Voter lists were posted at polling stations and they were
also downloadable on the Internet.
21. Despite previous recommendations from the Venice Commission
and the OSCE/ODIHR that all relevant authorities take all necessary
steps, according to an integrated approach, to compile an accurate
voter register, the exchange of data among government institutions
was insufficiently organised or regulated. Concerns about the quality
of the voter lists were strongly expressed by all opposition parties
(inflated numbers, inclusion of deceased people, high numbers of
voters registered at the same address – sometimes inexistent). There
were six verified cases of demolished buildings or of buildings
damaged during the 1988 earthquake, where voters were still registered.
22. In fact, as opposed to each and every demographic indicator,
which show a decrease of the Armenian population, the number of
citizens listed on the voter list was the only one to increase since
the 2008 presidential election, by 157 000. This could only contribute
to the lack of confidence in the electoral process.
23. Prior to the election day, 2 484 003 voters were registered.
24. A high number of passports were printed in 2011 and 2012,
but the Passport and Visa Department stated that this was mainly
due to replacements of previous passports.
25. The Electoral Code denies access to the voter lists, as signed
by the voters, after the election day, for reasons of confidentiality.
The constitutionality of this provision was challenged by 28 members
of parliament on 28 April 2012, but the Constitutional Court upheld
it on 5 May 2012.
26. The candidate registration process was inclusive. The CEC
registered all 9 candidate lists for the proportional component
of the elections from 8 political parties and 1 bloc of parties,
amounting to 1 016 candidates. The TECs registered 155 candidates
in the 41 constituencies, of which 89 were nominated by 13 parties
and 66 were self-nominated. Two self-nominated candidates were rejected.
After registration, 12 candidates withdrew from the proportional
and 18 from the majoritarian contest. A self-nominated candidate was
beaten on 6 April and subsequently withdrew; his case is still being
investigated by the authorities.
4 The campaign period
and media environment
27. The election campaign was vibrant, competitive and
largely peaceful. The freedoms of assembly, expression and movement
were generally respected. However, violent incidents were noted,
RPA supporters having assaulted ANC candidates and activists while
they were distributing campaign materials. Also, the police is investigating
the stabbing of an opposition supporter in a village, allegedly
by the son of the RPA mayor.
28. All parties and the bloc running in the proportional elections
underlined their commitment to hold elections in line with international
standards. There were a number of initiatives by the authorities,
electoral contestants and civil society, aimed at ensuring the integrity
of the process. However, the campaign was marked by allegations
of deficiencies in the voter lists, vote buying, issuance of passports
to facilitate fraud, and voter intimidation.
29. Contestants did not always comply with the law with regard
to the use of posters and campaign material. RPA posters were observed
on public transport and posters, mostly of RPA but also of Prosperous
Armenia and ARF, on municipal buildings.
30. Also, administrative resources were misused, in direct contradiction
with the Electoral Code. The RPA actively involved teachers and
pupils in campaign events, including during school hours. In one
case, teachers and local authorities even asked parents to attend
an RPA event. RPA campaign material and party flags were present
on a number of school buildings.
31. There were cases of serious pressure on voters, such as obliging
employees to attend RPA rallies and discouragement from attending
opposition rallies.
32. A company belonging to the Prosperous Armenia leader, Gagik
Tsarukyan, distributed some 500 tractors during the campaign period,
in contradiction to the Electoral Code, but the CEC decided that
there was no violation of the law.
33. The Prosecutor General’s office and the police were transparent
in their follow-up activities on reported electoral violations,
but no charges were brought against potential violators and many
cases were closed, some after only apparently cursory investigation.
34. The media offered extensive coverage of the main political
contestants, providing each with sufficient opportunities to reach
out to voters. The public broadcaster provided political parties
with both free and paid airtime, in accordance with the Electoral
code. This seemed to be an improvement in relation to the period
prior to the official campaign. However, in several cases, television
channels, instead of relying on their own material, broadcast in
the news the same campaign material that was used in paid political
advertisements. This concerned both RPA and Prosperous Armenia.
5 Complaints and
appeals
35. Election commissions and courts dealt with election
complaints in a manner that often left stakeholders without effective
consideration of their claims, because of the overly formalistic
approach to handling complaints.
36. Various stakeholders expressed a significant lack of trust
in the election administration, courts and law enforcement bodies
to handle electoral complaints impartially and effectively. There
was a general reluctance to report electoral offences. Also, it
was evident that knowledge on the complaint procedures was insufficient.
37. Prior to election day, the CEC received some 494 complaints.
The vast majority (461) was filed by one person, mostly alleging
campaigning by high-level public officials running as candidates
and imbalanced news reporting. The CEC refused to consider these
complaints on the ground that private individuals did not have the
right to file such complaints. At the same time, the CEC examined
some of the facts alleged in these complaints and found no violations.
Almost all other complaints filed with the CEC were refused consideration on
various technical grounds or were rejected, often without due consideration
of the claim’s substance or evidence. Some decisions lacked a sound
legal basis.
38. Some 30 complaints were lodged with TECs prior to election
day, mainly alleging infringements of campaign rules including vote
buying, campaigning in schools and poster violations. Most cases
were not given due consideration.
39. Four cases related to candidate registration were filed with
the Administrative Court, which rejected them all. Some 22 complaints
were filed with the Administrative Court before election day. Nearly
all were denied consideration or were dismissed on technical grounds,
without the core substance of the claim being examined or without
a sound legal basis.
6 Election day
40. On election day, the observers of the International
Election Observation Mission were able to visit almost 1 000 polling
stations throughout the country, out of a total of 1 982.
41. Overall, election day was calm and largely peaceful. Opening
procedures were assessed positively in most of the polling stations
visited. Voters were well informed about the procedures to follow.
However, voting was assessed negatively in 10% of the polling stations
observed, which is considerable. According to statistics used by
ODIHR for almost 20 years, a percentage below 2-3% means a good
election day; a percentage of 5% already raises concern and a percentage
higher than 10% means an election day with high concern.
42. The main factor which negatively influenced the voting process
was the lack of organisation inside the polling stations. Open disputes
among PEC members and/or between PEC members and party or candidate proxies,
or even with observers were common. Proxies interfered in or even
directed the voting process, or rather impeded its smooth running,
thereby creating chaos. In fact, there were cases when proxies were de facto leading the entire voting
process, with the Chairperson and the members of the PEC being reduced
to spectators without any authority at all. Observers had the feeling
that the proxies of the Republican Party and of Prosperous Armenia
behaved as if they had ownership of the election process and therefore
dominated it entirely.
43. Persons wearing a badge “Maxinfo” were observed filming continuously
with small cameras in a large number of polling stations, in an
extremely intrusive manner, which induced tension among voters whose
every movement was caught on camera from a distance of 0.5 metres.
In one polling station, the person representing “Maxinfo” had secured
his camera on the voting booth itself. When asked whether they were
journalists, people from “Maxinfo” gave vague and contradictory
answers, saying that “they represent the media” but without indicating
whether they worked for a television channel or for a newspaper;
others said that their work was “secret”; still others acknowledged
they were in fact proxies acting on behalf of Prosperous Armenia.
44. Often, persons from “Maxinfo” constantly directed the voters
towards the voting booths, standing persistently between the booths,
at less than one meter from them. When asked, the Chairperson of
a polling station where this had been observed stated that he himself
had asked them to act in this way. It was however clear that such
“assistance” was not needed at all. One team observed a “Maxinfo”
representative literally shouting at the chairperson of one PEC
in order to take over control of the voting process.
45. In one polling station, a domestic observer claiming to represent
an NGO called “Young Diplomats” obviously had no idea about this
NGO or his own role in it.
46. Organised groups of around 10 to 15 young men, mainly black-clad,
were observed at the entrance of several polling stations, under
the control of a well-dressed “supervisor” who clearly demonstrated
authority over them. Such persons were observed approaching voters
arriving at the polling station and whispering to them before they
entered the polling station. When photographed, the groups dispersed.
In one polling station, at the arrival of the observer team, the
proxy of the Republican Party, who acted as a de
facto leading authority inside the polling station, went
outside and, after a short discussion with the group, the group
dispersed. An observer who asked for a light from such a group received
as a gift a lighter with the logo of the Republican Party.
47. Observers felt that the generalised intimidation of voters,
by all the means described above, was the result of a deliberate
and well orchestrated action from the parties of the ruling coalition.
48. Other violations were reported, such as family and group voting,
lack of secrecy of the vote (in particular in small polling stations
where overcrowding led voters to vote on tables, rather than in
the booths), persons repeatedly assisting elderly voters, seemingly
identical signatures on the voter lists. Proxies from the ruling parties
and representatives of the television channel “Ketron”, owned by
a leader from Prosperous Armenia, were observed instructing voters
how to vote, even showing them where to put the mark.
49. Stamping passports with special ink, a method chosen by the
CEC to prevent multiple voting, instead of the classical and verified
method of finger inking, proved to be a complete fiasco due to the
low quality of the ink, which was supposed to last at least 12 hours,
but which was actually becoming invisible much faster. PECs actually
had to use regular ink to stamp the passports, thereby conflicting
with the reasons invoked by the CEC for using special ink (to make
impossible the later identification of those citizens who had voted).
50. Allegations of vote buying were reported to the police during
election day and several criminal cases were initiated.
51. The vote count process was assessed negatively by IEOM teams
in almost one fifth of the polling stations observed. Basic steps
(such as the counting of signatures in the voter lists) were not
always observed. A few PECs performed the count in a non-transparent
manner. Unauthorised persons participated in one in four counts
observed. Isolated cases of falsification of the results or of the
protocols were reported. There were also isolated cases of ballot
box stuffing. Figures in the protocols frequently could not be corroborated.
One in three PECs observed had problems in completing the protocols
and one in four PECs did not post up copies of the protocols for
public scrutiny.
52. The tabulation process was assessed positively in most of
the TECs observed. However, many TEC premises were overcrowded,
many PEC protocols were observed to be not fully completed and,
frequently, arithmetical errors had to be corrected by TECs.
53. On 13 May 2012, the official results were made public by the
CEC:
- Republican Party: 44.02%
(664 440 votes)
- Prosperous Armenia Party: 30.12% (454 673 votes)
- Armenian National Congress bloc: 7.08% (106 903 votes)
- Heritage: 5.76% (86 998 votes)
- Armenian Revolutionary Federation: 5.67% (85 550 votes)
- Rule of Law: 5.51% (83 123 votes)
- The Communist Party of Armenia, the Democratic Party of
Armenia and the United Armenians Party failed to pass the threshold,
gathering 1.5% (15 899 votes), 0.37% (5 577 votes) and 0.2% (2 945
votes) respectively.
- The Republican Party will have 69 seats in the 131-member
National Assembly to be convened shortly (40 from the party-list
and 29 from single-mandate elections). Prosperous Armenia will have
37 seats (28 from the party-list and 9 from single-mandate elections).
The Armenian National Congress will have 7 seats (all from the party
list). The Armenian Revolutionary Federation and Rule of Law will
have 6 seats each (both having won 5 seats through the party list
and 1 seat through single-mandate elections). Heritage will have
5 seats (all from the party list). One seat will be held by a non-partisan
candidate who won in a single-mandate race.
According
to the final data of the CEC, a total of 1 573 053 people out of
2 523 101 eligible voters on the electoral roll went to the polls
on 6 May (about 62.3%). A total of 53 831 ballot papers were declared
invalid.
7 Conclusions
54. The ad hoc committee urges the competent authorities
of Armenia to take all necessary steps in order to build public
confidence in elections, by guaranteeing the fairness of the entire
electoral process.
55. Indeed, one of the main issues observed by the delegation
prior to the election day was the generalised lack of trust in the
electoral process as a whole, both by political stakeholders and
by the general public. One of the most controversial issues contributing
to this lack of trust was the inaccuracy of the voter lists, which
gave use to speculation about the misuse of the votes of persons
living abroad but who were still included on the lists.
56. The ad hoc committee considers that the Armenian citizens
living abroad should be given the possibility to vote in polling
stations abroad.
57. The accuracy of the voter lists is a prerequisite for correct
elections, as is the absence of any pressure on voters, both during
the electoral campaign and on election day. The parliamentary elections
of 6 May 2012 failed to ensure both these imperatives. The ad hoc
committee considers that these issues must be vigorously dealt with
by the Armenian authorities in the immediate future, in particular
in view of the upcoming presidential election in 2013.
Appendix 1 – Composition
of the ad hoc committee
Based on
proposals by the political groups, the ad hoc committee was composed
as follows:
- Baroness NICHOLSON OF
WINTERBOURNE, Head of the Delegation
- Group of the European People’s
Party (EPP/CD)
- Lolita
ČIGĀNE, Latvia
- David DARCHIASHVILI, Georgia
- Renato FARINA, Italy
- Andres HERKEL, Estonia
- Jan KAŹMIERCZAK, Poland
- Gebhard NEGELE, Liechtenstein
- Mirosława NYKIEL, Poland
- Yves POZZO di BORGO, France
- Giuseppe SARO, Italy
- Piotr WACH, Poland
- Socialist Group (SOC)
- Lennart AXELSSON, Sweden
- Igor IVANOVSKI, “The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”
- Athina KYRIAKIDOU, Cyprus
- Oleksiy PLOTNIKOV, Ukraine
- Stefan SCHENNACH, Austria
- European Democrat Group (EDG)
- Roger GALE, United Kingdom
- Alliance of Liberals and Democrats
for Europe (ALDE)
- André
BUGNON, Switzerland
- Paolo GIARETTA, Italy
- Dangute MIKUTIENÉ, Lithuania
- Baroness NICHOLSON OF WINTERBOURNE, United Kingdom
- Chiora TAKTAKISHVILI, Georgia
- European Commission for Democracy
through Law (Venice Commission)
- Serhii KALCHENKO, Ukraine
- Secretariat
- Mr Bogdan Torcătoriu, Administrative Officer, Interparliamentary
Cooperation and Election Observation Unit
- Ms Daniele Gastl, Assistant
- Mr Gaël Martin-Micallef, Venice Commission Secretariat
The pre-electoral
mission was composed of two members:
- Alliance
of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE)
- Baroness NICHOLSON OF WINTERBOURNE,
United Kingdom
- Group of the European People’s
Party (EPP/CD)
- Secretariat
- Mr Bogdan Torcătoriu, Administrative
Officer, Interparliamentary Co-operation and Election Observation
Unit
- Mr Bas Klein, Secretariat of the Assembly
Appendix 2 – Programme of
the pre-electoral mission (Yerevan, 11-12 May 2012)
Wednesday
11 April 2012
09:30-10:00 Delegation meeting
10:30-11:00 Meeting with Ms Silvia Zehe, Head of the Council
of Europe Office in Yerevan
11:00-12:00 Meeting with Ms Radmila Shekerinska, Head of the
OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission and her staff
12:00-13:00 Meeting with the diplomatic corps in Yerevan:
- Ambassador Katherine Leach,
British Embassy, representing the Council of Europe Committee of
Ministers chairmanship
- Ambassador Traian Hristea, Head of the European Union
Delegation to Armenia
- Ambassador Andrey Sorokin, Head of the OSCE Office in
Armenia
- ambassadors of the countries represented in the pre-election
delegation
15:00-16:00 Meeting with representatives
of the civil society:
16:00-17:00 Meeting with media representatives:
- Yerevan Press Club – Boris Navasardyan,
Chairperson
- Caucasus Institute – Nina Iskandaryan, Planning Officer,
responsible for monitoring
- RFE/RL – Aghasi Yenokyan, Director of the Yerevan Bureau
- Public TV – Levon Galstyan, Deputy Director
- Public Radio – Nerses Davidyans, First Deputy Director
- ‘A1+’ – Mesrop Movsesyan, Director
- Aravot daily – Arpine Simonyan, journalist specialising
in elections
- Azg daily – Aghavni Harutyunyan, journalist specialising
in the work of the Parliamentary Assembly
17:30-18:30 Meeting
with Mr Samvel Nikoyan, President of the National Assembly, with
the participation of the Armenian Delegation to the Parliamentary
Assembly
Thursday 12 April
2012
9:00-11:30 Meeting with leaders and representatives of the
parties running in the elections:
- Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (Mr Vahan Hovhannesyan, Ms Lilit Galstyan,
Mr Astsvik Minasyan)
- Heritage (Mr Styopa Safaryan, Mr Armen Martirossyan) and
Free Democrats (Mr Armen Arakelian, Ms Anush Sedrakyan)
- Prosperous Armenia (Ms Naira Zohrabyan, Mr Vahe Enfiajyan)
- Republican Party of Armenia (Mr Galust Sahakyan, Ms Eduard
Sharmazanov, Mr Davit Harutunyan, Mr Gagik Melikyan, Mr Artak Zakaryan)
- Rule of Law (Ms Heghine Bisharyan)
12:00-13:00 Meeting with Mr Tigran Mukuchyan, Chairperson
of the Central Electoral Commission
15:00-15:45 Meeting with Mr Levon Zourabian, Co-ordinator
of the extra-parliamentarian coalition of parties “Armenian National
Congress”
16:00-16:45 Meeting with Mr Serzh Sargsyan, President of Armenia
17:00-17:45 Meeting with Mr Hunan Poghosyan, Deputy Head of
the National Police of Armenia and Mr Hovhannes Kocharyan, Head
of the Visa and Passports Department
18:00 Meeting with Mr Ashot Hovakimyan, Deputy Minister of
Foreign Affairs and Mr Zorab Mnatsakanian, Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs responsible for European Integration
19:30 Press conference
Appendix 3 – Declaration
of the pre-electoral mission
Armenia:
PACE pre-electoral delegation told of competitive electoral environment
but also of concerns about the possibility of multiple voting
Strasbourg, 13.04.2012 – Armenia on the eve of its parliamentary
election has a competitive electoral environment in an improved
legal framework, provided by its new Electoral Code, warmly welcomed
a pre-electoral delegation from the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe (PACE), visiting Yerevan on 11 and 12 April 2012.
It is important that the Electoral Code is fully implemented
and in good faith. The delegation took careful note of strong concerns
of the possibility of double-voting, perhaps as a result of the
inclusion on the voters’ list of Armenian citizens living abroad.
The delegation understood that these concerns should be addressed
before the election.
The low level of trust in the electoral process as a whole
is another issue underscored by the delegation’s interlocutors.
A series of parallel initiatives designed to increase public confidence
in the electoral process have already been initiated by different
electoral stakeholders. It is important for these initiatives to
reach their common goal, in a synergetic way.
The electoral campaign that has just begun could well be the
opportunity for all political parties and candidates to clearly
disseminate their policies for Armenia’s future development, so
that voters can make an informed choice.
The PACE pre-electoral delegation (1) was in Yerevan at the
invitation of the President of the National Assembly of Armenia.
It met with the President of Armenia, the Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs, the President of the National Assembly, the Chairman of
the Central Electoral Commission, the Deputy Head of the National Police,
representatives of the main political parties running in these elections,
NGO and media representatives, the head of the OSCE/ODIHR election
observation mission and diplomats in Yerevan.
A fully-fledged, 28-member team of PACE observers will arrive
in Yerevan at the beginning of May to observe the vote in close
co-operation with teams from OSCE/ODIHR, the OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly and the European Parliament. The PACE delegation will present
its findings and recommendations to the Assembly’s Standing Committee
on 25 May in Tirana.
Appendix 4 – Programme of
the election observation mission in Armenia (Yerevan, 4-7 May 2012)
Friday
4 May 2012
09:00-10:00 Ad hoc committee meeting
10:00-10:30 Opening of joint parliamentary briefings
- Address by Mr François-Xavier
de Donnea, Head of the OSCE PA Delegation
- Address by Baroness Emma Nicholson, Head of the PACE Delegation
- Address by Mr Krzysztof Lisek, Head of the European Parliament
Delegation
10:30-11:00 Panel discussion on the
context of this election
11:00-12:30 Briefing by the OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation
Mission
Introduction and overview of findings to date:
- Ms Radmila Šekerinska, Head
of Mission
Polling procedures and observation
forms:
Political campaign and candidates:
- Ms Monika Izydorczyk, Political Analyst
Media
environment:
Complaints and appeals:
- Ms
Marla Morry, Legal Analyst
Questions and answers:
12:30-13:30 Electoral Administration
- Central Election Commission, Mr Tigran Mukuchyan, Chairperson
15:00-18:00 Meetings
with political parties:
15:00-15:30 - Republican Party of Armenia, Mr Davit Harutyunyan,
member of the executive body of the party
15:30-16:00 - Prosperous Armenia, Ms Naira Zohrabian, Chairperson
of the National Assembly Standing Committee on European Integration,
and Mr Aram Safaryan, Chairperson of the National Assembly Standing
Committee on Protection of Human Rights and Public Affairs
16:00-16:30 - Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Ms Lilit
Galstyan, Member of Parliament
16:30-17:00 - Rule of Law Party, Mr Davit Karapetyan, proportional
list candidate
17:00-17:30 - Heritage, Mr Raffi Hovannisian, Chairperson,
and Free Democrats, Mr Khachatur Kokobelyan, Chairperson
17:30-18:00 - Armenian National Congress bloc, Mr Levon Ter-Petrossyan,
Chairperson
Saturday 5 May
2012
10:00-11:15 Meeting with representatives of the civil society:
- Armenian Helsinki Committee
– Mr Robert Revazyan, Lawyer
- Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly – Mr Artur Sakunts, Chairperson
- Transparency International – Mr Varuzhan Hoktanyan, Director
- It’s Your Choice – Mr Harutyun Hambardzumyan, Director
- Open Society Foundations – Ms Larisa Minasyan, Executive
Director
- Regional Studies Center – Mr Richard Giragosian, Director
- Counterpart International – Mr Alex Sardar, Chief of Party
- Caucasus Institute – Ms Nina Iskandaryan, Head of Planning
Department
11:15-12:30 Meeting with representatives of the media:
- Yerevan Press Club – Mr Boris
Navasardyan, President
- RFE/RL – Mr Aghasi Yenokyan, Head of Yerevan Office
- Public TC – Mr Arthur Grigoryan, Journalist
- Public Radio – Mr Nerses Davidyans, Deputy Director
- A1+ – Ms Karine Asatryan
- Azg Daily – Ms Aghavni Harutyunyan, Author
- Armenian Times – Mr Vahagn Hovakimyan, Journalist
- Jamanak Daily – Ms Lusine Khachatryan, Journalist
- Aravot daily newspaper – Mr Aram Abrahamyan, Editor-in-Chief
- http://kornelij.livejournal.com – Mr Samvel Martirosyan,
blogger
From 12:30 Meeting with interpreters and
drivers for the teams deployed outside of Yerevan
12:30-13:30 Technical arrangements and deployment of teams
deployed in Yerevan
- Distribution
of regional briefing packs for teams
- Area specific briefings conducted by the OSCE/ODIHR EOM
long-term observers for teams deployed in Yerevan
From
13:30 Meeting with interpreters and drivers for the teams deployed
in Yerevan
Sunday 6 May
2012
All day Observation of opening, polling and counting
Monday 7 May
2012
09:00-10:00 Debriefing of the ad hoc Committee
14:00 Joint press conference
Appendix 5 – Statement of
the International Election Observation Mission
Armenian
elections competitive and largely peaceful, but shortcomings undermined
confidence in the process, observers say
Strasbourg, 07.05.2012 – Sunday’s parliamentary elections
in Armenia featured a vibrant and largely peaceful campaign, with
overall balanced media coverage, but pressure on voters and a deficient
complaints process created an unequal playing field, the international
election observers said on Monday.
Observers noted a campaign environment that generally respected
freedoms of assembly and expression and candidates were, for the
most part, able to campaign freely. But the general lack of confidence
in the integrity of the process amongst political parties and the
general public is an issue of great concern.
The elections were held under a new Electoral Code that provided
a sound legal framework for conducting democratic elections, but
stakeholders failed to implement important aspects of the new law
and the manner in which complaints were dealt with undermined the
right to effective legal redress.
“Armenia deserves recognition for its electoral reforms and
its open and peaceful campaign environment but, in this race, several
stakeholders too often failed to comply with the law and election
commissions too often failed to enforce it,” said Francois-Xavier
de Donnea, the Special Co-ordinator to lead the short-term OSCE observer
mission and Head of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly delegation.
“As a result, the international commitments to which Armenia has
freely subscribed were not always respected.”
The process of candidate registration was inclusive overall.
Despite improved legislation with regard to voter registration,
observers said that the accuracy of the voter lists and their potential
misuse for electoral fraud added to the lack of confidence in the
process.
The high turnout of over 60 per cent, the wide age range among
voters, and the clear understanding of the electoral process by
young and old alike were impressive, but reports of widespread interference
with the running of polling stations, voters’ movement and casting
of votes throughout the day by certain political parties raised
serious concerns”, said Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne, the
Head of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE)
delegation. “The authorities must address this unacceptable behaviour
before the presidential election next year.”
“I cannot stress enough how important it is to see these elections
and our preliminary findings in the broader context and as the beginning
of the process, not the end,” said Krzysztof Lisek, the Head of
the European Parliament delegation. “Our preliminary conclusions
today and the final recommendations of the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights, once they are published, should be
taken as the goal to achieve in view of the upcoming presidential
election.”
Election day was generally calm and peaceful, but marked by
organisational problems and undue interference in the process, mostly
by party representatives.
“The election campaign was open and respected fundamental
freedoms, and the media offered broad and balanced coverage during
the official campaign period,” said Radmila Šekerinska, the Head
of the Election Observation Mission of the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights. “Unfortunately, this was overshadowed
by concerns over the accuracy of voter lists and violations of the
Electoral Code that created an unequal playing field.”