Home  |   Please authorize or register   |   Make home page Thursday, 24 Jule 2008    
Russo-British Information Portal
News Dating Forum Travel Information

News
Russia
Business
UK
World
Politics
Sport
Science & Technology
Culture
Arts & Theatre
Sochi 2014
Watch it Live!
    News Archive
 
Information
Geography
Customs
History
Personalities
Reference Information
President of Russia
Notes from the Underground
Russian soccer
Legal Issues
Cultural Attractions
Law Firm
 
Dating
Men
Women
All
My profile
Search
 
News - RSS
Forum
Photo Gallery
Feedback
Free adds
On-line radio
Project
Partners






This space is available to rent, inquire info@russiancourier.com





 Рейтинг@Mail.ru
Rambler's Top100
Rambler's Top100
Russo-British Information Portal

Russian election officials warn PACE of early comments on polls
Russia's Central Election Commission chief warned PACE observers on Thursday that any comments made ahead of the country's March 2 polls could be considered interference in Russia's internal policies.

A delegation of 25 members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), led by Andreas Gross, arrived in Moscow on Wednesday. The observers are expected to meet presidential candidates, political party members, top election officials, representatives from the media and NGOs and diplomatic missions.

"We have repeatedly asked all observer missions to refrain from making statements that could affect voter behavior before the election results are known," Vladimir Churov said after a meeting with PACE monitors.

In an interview with the Nezavisimaya Gazeta earlier on Thursday, Gross said that the coming presidential elections in Russia will be voting without real choice.

He also expressed disappointment with the refusal by presidential front runner Dmitry Medvedev to take part in TV debates, which he said could make elections fairer. Gross also criticized Medvedev for failing to demonstrate his adherence to democratic values and said there were a number of signals to suspect that the March 2 polls would be neither free nor fair.

Churov said that the goal of every election monitoring mission was "correct election monitoring, excluding interference in a country's domestic affairs."

In a statement summing up their visit to Moscow on February 7 and 8, a pre-election delegation of five PACE members said, "While the forthcoming election may appear competitive to some, with four candidates in the running, the real choice of alternatives is limited at best."

Commenting on the refusal by the OSCE's main election arm, the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), to attend the polls following a row with Russia's top election authorities earlier this month, Gross said their absence would negatively affect foreign perception of the voting.

The Central Election Commission said late last week that a total of 194 foreign observers have received accreditation to monitor Russia's March 2 presidential elections so far, but the number of the observers could rise as the process is still ongoing, with documentation for 21 more monitors still pending.

MOSCOW, February 28 (RIA Novosti)



28.02.2008
No comments yet.


Please fill the form to post your comments.
Your name: 
Comment:
Home |  News |  Information |  Feedback |  Dating |  Free ads |  Gallery |  Forum |  On-line radio