Showing posts with label Reuters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reuters. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

Ouattara coalition leads in Ivorian poll count


http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/12/us-ivorycoast-election-idUSTRE7BB28M20111212
ABIDJAN | Mon Dec 12, 2011 6:29pm EST

(Reuters) - Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara's ruling coalition led in partial results from Sunday's legislative election, according to a small sample of preliminary results released on Monday.
Ouattara's ruling coalition appears set for a landslide win based on voting patterns during the first round of last year's presidential polls.

A sweeping win in the West African state's first parliamentary poll in a decade would strengthen Ouattara's hand governing a country fresh from a power-struggle that killed more than 3,000 people.
Ouattara's ruling RDR and allied PDCI parties won 13 of the 17 seats announced by late Monday, according to the election commission, with independent candidates winning the other four. The National Assembly has 255 seats.

The poll passed peacefully, but the main opposition party called for a boycott. Turnout figures were not available, but appeared low, observers said.
"We think that tomorrow we'll have a lot more results. And if we haven't finished by then it is certain that by Wednesday latest all of the results will be known along with turnout," an election commission official said, asking not to be named.

Ouattara won a November 2010 presidential election but was only able to take power in April, after fighters supporting him invaded the economic capital Abidjan and arrested former leader Laurent Gbagbo who had refused to step down.

Gbagbo was spirited to The Hague last month to face war crimes charges for his role in the fighting.
Gbagbo's spokesman Justin Kone Katinan, in exile in Ghana, said evident low turnout in the December 11 legislative poll showed Ouattara did not have support of the Ivorian people and warned of possible fresh unrest if Gbagbo is not given a voice.
"When people feel unable to express themselves at the polls, they tend to go into the streets," Katinan told Reuters by telephone. "We don't want war to return to Ivory Coast. We have to acknowledge the warning that the people have given."

The U.S. embassy in Ivory Coast said in a statement on Monday that the election marks the end of the post-election crisis in world's top cocoa producing nation.
"We call on all political parties, even members of those parties who chose not to participate in these elections, to respect and support the new National Assembly," it said.

Despite some incidents, election officials and observers said voting proceeded normally.
More than 5 million people were eligible to vote for parliament in an election seen as a crucial step toward recovery after a decade of conflict and political turmoil.

Ouattara had urged Ivorians to vote, saying parliament had an essential role in rebuilding the country.
"Ivory Coast is at work and we need to build the institutions that will now be strong and independent institutions. I am applying myself to this task and that's why the December 11 vote is an essential vote for all Ivorians," Ouattara said after casting his ballot in Abidjan.

The poll could boost investor confidence in Ivory Coast, which wants to expand its gold mining, oil, cotton and services sectors to regain its place as the region's economic powerhouse.
Pockets of lingering tension and violence, particularly in the west, had raised fears of trouble during the polls, which were policed by local and about 7,000 United Nations security personnel.

(Writing by Bate Felix; Additional reporting by Richard Valdmanis in Dakar; Editing by Louise Ireland and Mike Roddy)

Monday, December 5, 2011

Russian Vote Criticized

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. (Reuters)


http://4.hidemyass.com/ip-1/encoded/Oi8va2ktbWVkaWEuYmxvZ3Nwb3QuY29tLzIwMTEvMTIvcnVzc2lhbi12b 3RlLWNyaXRpY2l6ZWQuaHRtbA%3D%3D
DECEMBER 5, 2011
By ALAN CULLISON
The Wall Street Journal
MOSCOW—Western election monitors said Monday that a Russian parliamentary vote this weekend was neither free nor fair, and tipped lopsidedly in favor of the pro-Kremlin party that nevertheless was dealt a humiliating setback.

Monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe denounced the voting irregularities in unusually harsh terms, saying that although election day was itself peaceful, it was marred by apparent manipulations and "serious indications of ballot box stuffing."

"To me, this election was like a game in which only some players are allowed to compete," said mission head Heidi Tagliavini at a news conference. "And the game was tilted in favor of one of the players."


Kremlin leaders were claiming a victory one day after the vote, although the pro-Kremlin party, United Russia, will lose a large number of seats in parliament, and is barely clinging to a majority.

The official tally showed United Russia was leading with 49.5% of the vote, with about 96% of precincts counted, according to Central Election Commission chief Vladimir Churov. He said United Russia it will get 238 of the Duma's 450 seats, a sharp drop compared to the previous vote that granted it a two-thirds majority in the State Duma, allowing it to change the constitution.

The results mark the largest electoral upset for Mr. Putin since his rise to power more than a decade ago, and highlight the fragility of the system of government that he has built since then under the name of "sovereign democracy." While the results don't threaten Mr. Putin's immediate grip on power, they could fuel rising tensions with the West. In the run-up to the vote, Mr. Putin had ramped up anti-Western rhetoric, accusing foreign-funded groups of attempting to destabilize the government.

Western criticism of the vote is likely to raise the Kremlin's apprehensions, because Mr. Putin plans to return to the presidency after another poll in March. "Any doubts about the legitimacy of these elections cast a shadow on the upcoming presidential elections," said Nikolai Zlobin, director of Russian and Asian programs at the World Security Institute in Washington, D.C. "Its very important to make sure that the population sees these results as legitimate."

In Moscow, security remained tight one day after the vote, with heavy police trucks parked along a main thoroughfare. Thousands of pro-Kremlin youth were bussed into the city center for a rally that leaders said was meant to neutralize antigovernment demonstrations. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told supporters Monday that the pro-Kremlin party's poor showing was evidence that the elections were fair. "United Russia received exactly what it has, not more and not less, and in that sense these were honest, fair and democratic elections," he said, according to the Interfax news agency. France on Monday urged Moscow to investigate the election violations cited by the OSCE, saying "all light must be shed on allegations in the report." Romain Nadal, deputy spokesman for the French foreign ministry said "we hope that lessons will be learned for the next elections organized in Russia."

Russian voters seem increasingly impatient with the Kremlin's stifling dominance of politics amid slowing economic growth and deepening inequality, analysts said. Lately the public discontent has spread to Mr. Putin, who has for the past two weeks avoided unscripted appearances after he was booed by the audience of a martial-arts competition in Moscow.

Opposition leader Boris Nemtsov said the vote spelled the beginning of the end of Mr. Putin's star-like popularity with Russians, and that his government will soon collapse. "He needs to hold an honest presidential election and allow opposition candidates to register for the race, if he doesn't want to be booed from Kamchatka to Kaliningrad,'' Mr. Nemtsov said on Ekho Moskvy radio.

While Kremlin leaders sounded reassurances that United Russia remained in a leadership position, loss in parliament was clearly a worry to a Kremlin apparatus that has kept a tight hold on the media, but has been unable to control popular grumbling on the Internet.

In a sign of the Kremlin's concern, departing President Dmitry Medvedev, who led the United Russia party, said the results could force the pro-Kremlin bloc into coalition-building with opposition parties to pass legislation. Such a result would mark a reversal for United Russia, which has in recent years been able to pass any legislation the Kremlin wanted without compromising with the sidelined opposition.

Opposition parties, stunted over the years by the dominance of United Russia, were beneficiaries of Sunday's vote. The Communist Party won a bit more than 19% of early returns, followed by Just Russia, a left-wing party founded with Kremlin help with about 13%. The nationalist Liberal Democratic Party, whose erratic head, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, has historically garnered protest votes, won just under 12%.

Westward-leaning liberals remain locked out of popular politics, and the sole liberal party allowed to run in elections Sunday didn't reach the 7% barrier to enter parliament.

But while the Kremlin will have a harder time steering Russia's parliament, vast powers still reside in Russia's presidency, a post Mr. Putin will occupy for another six years if he prevails in March elections.

Although final results appear to give United Russia a majority in parliament, Kremlin leaders appeared to be positioning themselves for a setback.

Mr. Medvedev, interviewed on Russian state television at United Russia headquarters, called the results "democracy in action," causing smiles in the room. Mr. Medvedev said that with a "more complex configuration" in parliament it may be necessary to resort to "coalition, bloc relations."

Mr. Putin, looking stern, said the results "reflect the real situation in the country. For United Russia, it's the optimal result." But he maintained that United Russia still kept its "leadership position."

State TV, usually carefully scripted in its coverage of politics, offered a surprising diversity of opinions in live reports Sunday night as news of the poor showing rolled in. Some commentators in the studio described the results as "catastrophic" for the ruling party, while others said the unexpectedly strong results for opposition parties were a sign of much-needed diversity in Russian politics.

Opposition parties and independent observers reported widespread voting abuses, though government officials said the election went smoothly. Nearly all the vote-rigging reported Sunday favored the United Russia party. Exit polls indicated that United Russia would get 46% to 48%, but as results trickled in the official tally climbed toward 50%.

The election came after what Kremlin critics called unprecedented pressure on vote monitors who were amassing evidence of voting irregularities. Websites of independent vote monitors and news websites fell under simultaneous hacker attacks before the start of voting, and remained out of commission on Monday.

The websites, belonging to the Ekho Moskvy radio station, online news portal Slon.ru and Novaya Gazeta, had published numerous stories on vote -fraud allegations. The U.S.-financed vote-monitoring group Golos, which fell under hacker attacks before polls opened, had been singled out by state-run media as a tool of foreign governments.

At Golos, email accounts were swamped by thousands of spam messages, and telephones of employees were also rendered useless by a torrent of automatic calls. Phone calls to the monitoring group were also somehow diverted to an unknown number, where an operator told callers to phone elsewhere, said Golos director Liliya Shibanova.

The spam attack disabled a Golos project that has drawn special Kremlin ire in the past week—an interactive map displaying reported campaign violations across the country ahead of the vote. The map allowed voters to click on the map to learn about and report violations in their own regions. As of Saturday the map had contained more than 5,500 complaints.

Other Kremlin critics simply boycotted the election, or encouraged voters to deface their ballots because restrictions on opposition parties made any real choice impossible.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Reuters Cites IRI Election Witnesses in Egypt

http://www.iri.org/news-events-press-center/news/reuters-cites-iri-election-witnesses-egypt
November 28, 2011
Big turnout, scant violence in Egypt vote: monitors
Reuters

By Tom Pfeiffer

CAIRO - Egyptians turned out in big numbers on a mostly peaceful first day of voting for a new parliament, driven by optimism to build a new post-Hosni Mubarak era and the threat of fines if they stayed at home, vote monitors said on Monday.
Democracy campaigners had worried a week of deadly clashes in Cairo and other cities in the run-up to the vote and a history of electoral violence might lead people to avoid polling stations for fear they could get caught up in unrest.

Many, especially the illiterate, were perplexed by complex procedures and long lists of candidates, but still turned up early on Monday to wait for hours in queues stretching up to 2 kilometers (more than one mile) at some stations, monitors said.
They said it was too early to estimate overall turnout. No figures have been released, but the top election committee official said numbers were more than expected.
The military rulers also reported a high turnout and extended voting hours to accommodate this.
"It's easy to predict that this will be a higher turnout than any recent election in Egypt," said Les Campbell, director for the Middle East and North Africa at the Washington-based National Democratic Institute (NDI). "We are seeing clear signs of voter excitement and participation."
In the parliamentary vote under Mubarak last November, officials put turnout at 35 percent in the first round of voting. Rights groups said it was more like 10 percent.
Anecdotally, judges supervising at several polling stations visited by Reuters in different districts of Cairo and elsewhere said turnout of registered voters on their lists was about 30 percent or more. A handful put it as high as 50 percent.
But judges stressed these were rough estimates and this was only the first day. Voters were lined up as they spoke.

Some voted on Monday to avoid a 500 Egyptian-pound ($83.30) fine for people who did not vote, monitors said. The fine was rarely enforced in the past but some feared that had changed.
"But there are also many who are going to vote to elect their candidates. When you add both, we expect a huge turnout," said Mohsen Kamal, monitoring supervisor at Al-Andalus Institute for Tolerance Studies, a European and U.S. funded monitor group.

TEST OF CREDIBILITY
The election, due to run through to mid-January, is a test for the credibility of Egypt's generals who have struggled to deal with social unrest and growing pressure for a quick handover to civilian rule.
The army said it would not allow foreigners to monitor the vote but seems to have backed down, allowing groups such as NDI, The Carter Center, the International Republican Institute and South African, Turkish, Polish and Danish groups to take part.
Alongside 300 foreign civil society representatives are 25,000 accredited monitors and thousands more concerned citizens who have pledged to alert the organizers to abuses.
Monitors Without Borders said the turnout was the biggest in six decades, and was accompanied by a flurry of citizen activism on social networks and YouTube, where people were uploading examples of violations.

The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights said it received around 300 complaints about polling stations that opened late, a lack of voting papers, supervisors falling sick and widespread flouting of a ban on campaigning at the ballot.
The chief of police in Ain Shams, a suburb of the capital Cairo, was suspended because an election area did not have ballot papers before early afternoon, the rights group said. Elsewhere, a judge canceled voting as people surged into a polling station he was overseeing.
"The judge couldn't take it," said Mouna Zulfakkar, a lawyer from the Egyptian rights group, which alerted the Interior Ministry and armed forces to many reported violations. "They have been extremely responsive," she said.
Monitors said they heard of election-related brawls in Port Said, Assiut, Cairo and Luxor but none of the deaths that often overshadowed discredited votes under Mubarak. ($1 = 6.0025 Egyptian pounds)