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Armenian Premier's Party Wins Parliamentary Vote: Unofficial Results

21.06.2021 12:26

Under shadow of last year’s defeat in Karabakh, Pashinyan’s party comes first in election, rival alleges fraud.

The party of Armenia's acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan won the early parliamentary polls with 53.92% of the votes, according to preliminary results on Monday.

Unofficial results announced by the Central Electoral Commission of Armenia showed that Pashinyan's Civil Contract Party came first in the election held on Sunday.

Former President Robert Kocharian's party Armenian Alliance came second with 21.1% of the votes.

According to the results, Pashinyan's party lacks 0.08% to reach 54% threshold to form the government by itself.

However, the electoral body's chairman Tigran Mukuchyan told reporters that the Civil Contract Party can form the government.

According to the election law in Armenia, the votes of the parties that failed to pass the threshold and failed to enter the parliament are distributed among the parties that succeeded in entering parliament.

"The latest official results of the election will be announced seven days later," Mukuchyan said.

The I Have Honor Alliance, supported by the former President and Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan, gained 5.23% of the votes and entered the parliament.

The voter turnout in the election was 49.4%, according to the commission.

In a written statement, the Armenian Alliance said that they would not recognize the election results for now, citing "hundreds of signals from polling stations testifying to organized and planned falsifications."

While vote counting was underway, Pashinyan announced on Facebook that he would start negotiations with all "healthy" political powers.

Twenty-six political movements competed in the election for the office vacated after Pashinyan resigned from premiership on April 25.

A total of 22 political parties, along with four alliances, participated in the election to receive votes from over 2.59 million people.

Pashinyan's resignation came after last year's defeat in the Karabakh region, where a six-week-long war between Armenia and Azerbaijan ended with a Russian-brokered truce on Nov. 10.

Relations between the two former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

*Writing by Sena Guler in Ankara​​​​​​​ -



 
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