From suspected vote rigging in Chechnya and alleged stuffed
ballot boxes in Kirov to disappearing election committee stamps in Tuva,
observers from opposition parties said a slew of violations tarnished the
elections Sunday.
The head of the Communist Party's legal department, Vadim Solovyov,
said the party's team of 200,000 observers had toted up a litany of apparently
fraudulent voting schemes and had passed on its evidence to international
monitors. He said the party had called on prosecutors to open criminal
investigations into several alleged violations.
But Central Elections Commission chief Alexander Veshnyakov said the
vote appeared to have passed "without excesses," while independent
monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
still faced a check of ballots through the night and were saving their
conclusions for a news conference Monday.
In Chechnya, some observers claimed ballot stuffing doubled voter turnout
to more than 70 percent.
"At this polling station only 200 people voted, or about 10 percent,"
said Ruslan Khadashev, an observer for single-mandate independent candidate
Salambek Maigov. "I don't know where they got 70 percent from."
An election official at Polling Station No. 403 in Grozny said the station
had been ordered to ensure a turnout of 85 percent. "We filled in
1,000 ballots yesterday. As a percentage of the number of people allocated
to this polling station -- 2,100 -- that's almost 50 percent. The rest
we have to get by way of real voting," said the official, Ziyavdi
Chagayev.
The most complicated thing was to try and distract the attention of
observers, he said. "You needed to put the ballots in one by one.
If you stuck a whole packet in together, it would have been noticed during
the count.
"The 1,000 ballots we filled in were for United Russia and Akhmar
Zavgayev. It was said officially that we should support them." Zavgayev
had the blessing of the Kremlin-backed Chechen administration and was
running for Chechnya's single State Duma seat. According to a preliminary
count late Sunday, he had 100 percent of the vote.
Chechens polled on the street expressed little interest in voting. "What's
the point in voting when the results are known beforehand?" said
Zarema Dyshneyeva, 33, a teacher of foreign literature at Chechen State
University. "Everything's decided without us and for us."
Authorities, however, said the vote in Chechnya and elsewhere appeared
to have been conducted without major violations. Veshnyakov conceded there
had been problems in Bashkortostan, where observers were temporarily barred
from doing their jobs, and noted there had been an electricity blackout
in parts of St. Petersburg, Interfax reported. But he said all these events
appeared to have been dealt with immediately and had "no serious
consequences."
Even before preliminary results started coming in, Communist leader
Gennady Zyuganov complained about violations. "Unfortunately, there
have been a lot of violations," he said. "In Primorye, the governor
is calling on everyone to vote for the democrats. Yesterday in Yakutia,
the vice president called on everyone to vote for whomever he considered
necessary. This is a violation."
Solovyov listed just some of the violations uncovered by his party,
including: ballots being handed out to more than 100 villagers in Udmurtia
the day before elections with the box for United Russia already ticked
off; 120 ballots at a polling station in the Altai region with the Communist
Party scrubbed out; a missing election committee stamp in Tuva; and observers
being barred from polling stations in Dagestan.
Yabloko deputy head Sergei
Ivanenko said his party's observers had uncovered some violations
in the Far East and the Urals but had no complaints yet.
Galina Mikhalyova, head of Yabloko's analytical center, said the day's
first complaint came from Vladivostok Polling Station No. 310 at about
5 a.m. Moscow time. A Yabloko observer complained about a fraud nicknamed
"carousel," in which someone obtains a clean ballot, fills it
in favor of the party he chooses and pays a voter to cast the filled ballot.
The money is handed over after the voter returns with a clean ballot of
his own. The observer called the police and election officials, and the
suspects left in a minivan, Mikhalyova said.
An OSCE spokeswoman said, meanwhile, that the watchdog was waiting to
see how sweeping media bias in favor of United Russia "had affected
the outcome."
See also:
the original at
www.themoscowtimes.com
State Duma elections 2003
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