PM Pashinyanâs party wins Armenia election, preliminary results show
â Prime Minister Nikol â Pashinyanâs party has won Armeniaâs parliamentary election, preliminary results suggest, in a vote seen as a test of its handling â of a
â Prime Minister Nikol â Pashinyanâs party has won Armeniaâs parliamentary election, preliminary results suggest, in a vote seen as a test of its handling â of a peace deal with Azerbaijan and its growing turn to the West and away from traditional ally, Russia. â â Pashinyanâs Civil Contract party secured 49.81 percent of the vote, the countryâs Central Election Commission (CEC) said on â Monday, with an alliance led by the main opposition party Strong Armenia a distant second with 23.29 percent. Turnout in the landlocked country of three million was more than 58 percent of eligible voters, the CEC said. The prime minister is seeking a mandate to reorient the countryâs geopolitics, distancing former imperial ruler Russia and pushing to join the European Union.
Pashinyan claimed a âhistoric victory that will ensure Armeniaâs eternity and developmentâ. He pledged to âcontinue the course of rapprochement with the Westâ while also developing Armeniaâs relations with Russia. The second-placed Strong Armenia bloc is led by Samvel Karapetyan, a Russian-Armenian billionaire who made his fortune in Russia and is under house arrest for allegedly advocating for the governmentâs overthrow. He has rejected the charge as politically motivated. Karapetyan called the elections âshamefulâ and denounced alleged violations and repression, saying dozens of his campaign staff had been arrested. Armeniaâs Investigative Committee said it had opened 59 criminal cases over alleged electoral violations and detained nine people. Two other opposition forces â former President Robert Kocharyanâs Armenia alliance and the Prosperous Armenia party â also cleared the electoral threshold to get into parliament, winning 9.9 percent and 4 percent of the vote respectively, the CEC said.
Pashinyan fell short of securing the two-thirds majority in parliament, necessary to call the constitutional referendum â demanded as part of a peace deal with Azerbaijan, which has been intermittently at â war with Armenia since the late 1980s, and to normalise relations with Turkiye, a key ally of Azerbaijan. The final distribution of parliamentary seats is not yet clear. Pashinyan has frozen participation in a Russia-led security bloc while deepening ties with the EU and the United States, and set Armenia on a path towards possible EU membership. Moscow has bristled at the possible loss of yet another ally in its back yard. Last May, Russian President Vladimir Putin said, âWe all see what is happening with Ukraine now ⌠How did it all begin?
