KAZAKHSTAN: OSCE election experts to arrive

Published: 19 September 2005 y., Monday

The Organization for Security and Cooperation's (OSCE) Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) has announced a three-day needs assessment mission to Kazakhstan.

"This is a mission for December's upcoming presidential elections," Urdur Gunnarsdottir, the ODIHR's spokeswoman said from the Polish capital Warsaw on Monday.

Set to arrive on Wednesday, the three-man team will meet with government officials, members of the political opposition, NGOs, media groups and election authorities to discuss Kazakhstan's upcoming polls.

"There is no particular significance to this," Gunnarsdottir emphasised, describing the assessment mission as standard procedure for a country about to go to the polls.

"If it is indicated that there might be a reason to observe, we send a needs assessment mission, which in turn makes recommendations as to whether to observe or not," she explained.

Based in Warsaw, the ODIHR is active throughout the OSCE area in the fields of election observation, democratic development, human rights, tolerance and non-discrimination, and rule of law.

While Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has ruled the oil-rich ex-Soviet state for 16 years, intends to run for a new seven-year term, the 65-year-old leader has drawn heavy criticism for blocking democratic reforms and persecuting political opponents and free media.

International observers described the country's parliamentary elections one year earlier as flawed, with no opposition group represented in legislature. It remains to be seen how this election will proceed.

On Saturday Kazakh opposition leader Zharmakhan Tuyakbay announced his plans to run for the presidency for his "For a Just Kazakhstan" party.

Earlier this month, Nazarbayev pledged to ensure that December's polls would be democratic.

"As the country's incumbent president, I will create all the conditions to make the forthcoming presidential elections free, fair and transparent," Nazarbayev told the first session of parliament following the summer recess, according to the AP.

Nazarbayev said the results of the elections "must not cause any doubt," either among Kazakh voters or the international community, the news agency quoted him as saying.

But doubt is something very much on the minds of local and international activists alike. According to Freedom House in its annual comparative assessment of the state of political rights and civil liberties around the world, Central Asia's largest state is classified as 'not free'.

Šaltinis: IRIN
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Afghanistan: school poisoning

On Monday, around 50 Afghan teenagers were hospitalized after a mystery gas attack on their school in Parwan province, northwest of Kabul. more »

Weather, pilot error ... or both?

U.S. government investigators are trying to determine whether it was wintry weather, pilot error -- or a deadly combination of the two that caused a commuter plane to slam into a house of a Buffalo, New York suburb -- killing 50 people. more »

Stand-Up Obama

A round of applause for Barack Obama. Addressing journalists, politicians and celebrities, the president was keen to inject some humor as he summed up his first 100 days in office. more »

Reducing regional disparities in the EU and beyond

EU shares experience of strengthening regions with countries such as Brazil, Russia and China. more »

U.S. journalist freed in Iran

U.S.-born journalist Roxana Saberi, jailed in Iran, has been freed from prison, after having her sentence for spying reduced. more »

Abruzzo earthquake: Commissioner Hübner announces regional aid boost

As part of the European Commission's response to the earthquake which hit Italy's Abruzzo region on 6 April, Regional Policy Commissioner Danuta Hübner today announced an extension of the deadline for payment claims from the region's 2000-2006 Cohesion Policy programme. more »

EU and Latin America to meet in Prague, 13–14 May 2009

EU Foreign Affairs Ministers will meet with their counterparts from the Rio Group, assembling Latin America and Caribbean countries, on 13 May 2009 in Prague to discuss issues of major concern to both regions, notably the impact of the economic and financial crisis and a sustainable approach to energy security and climate change. more »

Round-up of May's Parliamentary debates from Strasbourg

In the last session of the current parliamentary term, MEPs approved a ban on almost all seal products, decided to put on hold telecoms reform and voted to back measures to protect primates from animal testing. more »

Pope's mideast trip

Pope Benedict's Mideast trip is meant to soothe relations between the Vatican and the Jewish and Muslim communities. more »

Moscow pipeline blast drama

The flames from a gas pipeline explosion in south west Moscow could be seen for miles. more »