Statement of the Central Election Commission of the Republic of Azerbaijan on Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe regarding the early presidential election held in the Republic of Azerbaijan on April 11, 2018
13 april 2018 10:38
Statement of the Central Election Commission of the Republic of Azerbaijan on Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe regarding the early presidential election held in the Republic of Azerbaijan on April 11, 2018
On February 5, 2018, the
President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, using his right enshrined in Section 1
of Article 101 of the Constitution of the Republic of Azerbaijan, called an
early presidential election in the Republic of Azerbaijan. On February 6, 2018,
the Central Election Commission of the Republic of Azerbaijan adopted a
Resolution, pursuant to Article 179 of the Election Code of the Republic of
Azerbaijan, setting the presidential election in the Republic of Azerbaijan for
April 11, 2018.
Preparations for the
election were made in compliance with the legislation and with quality, all
conditions were created to ensure free and independent conduct of 11 political
parties and other participants of the election. All the registered candidates,
who freely used the existing fair competitive environment and equal
opportunities, expressed their satisfaction with the election and congratulated
the candidate who won by a landslide.
All the preparatory
measures were taken according to the on schedule and effectively in order to
ensure that citizens of the Republic of Azerbaijan fully and easily use their
constitutional right to vote, all conditions were created for voters to freely
and independently make their choice. 118 representatives of 51 foreign media
outlets, and the vast majority of a nearly 60,000-strong army of observers,
including 894 international monitors representing 59 countries and 61
international organizations, who were provided with all opportunities to freely
and independently carry out their activity, described the Azerbaijani
presidential election as free, fair and transparent, and hailed the voting as
an outstanding improvement.
This view was separately
echoed in their interviews by many monitors of the observation mission of the
OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
But it is with great regret that we note that the statement made on behalf of
these organizations exaggerated the negative points, whose source was unknown
and which could not affect the results of the election (in a maximum of 156
polling stations, which is less than 2.8 percent of the total number of polling
stations), and alleged that technical problems were registered in 1,300 polling
stations. Having taken a stand that differed sharply from the views of the
aforementioned thousands observers and of their own representatives, the
observation mission of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe showed a tendency towards casting a shadow on the results of
the voting held in all 5,641 polling stations.
The statement bears
clear evidence of violation of the principles of objectivity, balance and
professionalism, and also includes numerous contradictions. Disregarding the
facts that all the presidential candidates were satisfied with the election
process, that there were no complaints or appeals about irregularities and that
the election saw high turnout, the statement attempts to create an artificial
falsification environment. And it is very difficult to understand whom these
alleged irregularities disadvantaged.
The aforementioned
points fairly raise suspicions about certain politically-motivated pressure
made by mission heads on observers in the course of preparation of the
statement by the observation mission of the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Even today representatives of
the mission met with separate individuals across the country, asking them to
provide evidence of only negative cases relating to the election.
In our opinion, such an
approach casts a shadow over objectivity and impartiality of the mission, and
provides a substantial foundation for the existing public opinion about biased
anti-Azerbaijani activity and an openly negative attitude of some people in the
management of mission, particularly deputy head of mission Stefan Krause,
towards the Azerbaijani government, authorities and the incumbent President,
who was one of the presidential candidates. The fact that Mr. Krause was
assigned a responsible position within this mission, insisted by the OSCE
Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, was an indication that the
report to be prepared with his involvement would have been biased.
On many occasions,
conclusions featured in the statement contradict each other. For example, the
statement says that "the election administration was well-resourced and
prepared the election efficiently.” Then it continues that "on election day,
international observers reported widespread disregard for mandatory
procedures.” Such contradictions in the statement at least raise questions.
Another contradiction: the statement says that "authorities were co-operative
and international observers were able to operate freely in the pre-election
period”. But then it claims that "International Election Observation Mission
and other observers were restricted in their observation (4 and 8 percent,
respectively).” Another comment seems to be more absurd – "distinction was not
made between the incumbent`s campaign and his official activities”. It would be
reasonable to explain what the essence of this distinction is and how this
distinction should be made. In no country in the world, a head of state running
for another term quits his/her activities. He/she just cannot do this. The only
ethical norm that may be applied to such pre-election situation is that a head
of state who continues his activities should not call on his voters to vote for
him. This rule has been strictly observed in all presidential elections
conducted in Azerbaijan.
The mission`s alleging that
"on election day, international observers reported lack of transparency” is
completely unacceptable. The Central Election Commission states that all
polling stations were provided with transparent ballot boxes, and web cameras
were installed in nearly 1000 polling stations to allow online observation of
the voting. This is of crucial importance in ensuring transparency of the
election.
The statement says that
"other candidates refrained from directly challenging or criticizing the
incumbent”. The word ‘criticize’ in this phrase is a complete surprise.
Firstly, no election can provide for personal criticism of a separate
candidate. Criticism can be directed at a candidate`s election campaign only.
Secondly, debates held by candidates on TV channels clearly showed that the
government`s domestic and foreign policy was criticized by candidates.
Moreover, one of the candidates even called the Azerbaijani authorities to
renounce sovereignty of Azerbaijan state. Given these facts, the statement`s
alleging that "this election lacked genuine competition” is surprising and
unacceptable.
The statement notes that a
total of 58,175 domestic observers were registered, including 4,041 observers
accredited by NGOs. It claims that obstacles introduced by the government and
the election administration limit the possibility of civil-society
organizations to operate. It is inappropriate to speak of limitations when more
than 4,000 observers were registered by the NGOs, which are key civil society
institutions. The Central Election Commission is surprised that when speaking
of election observation only the Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies
Center is mentioned. They said that the center remains unregistered and its
activities are limited. But there are other organizations specializing in
election observation in Azerbaijan and they locally monitored the presidential
election. For example, one of them is the Association for Civil Society
Development in Azerbaijan (AVCIYA). At the same time, National NGO Forum, which
is Azerbaijan`s largest NGO platform and which groups more than 600 civil
society institutions, conducted monitoring in 590 polling stations before and
on election day.
The statement alleges that
"there are no specific legal measures to promote the participation of women in
political life.” However, there has been a significant progress in this area in
the past few years. Women are broadly represented in election commissions. In
addition, in 1 out of 87 regional and city executive authorities the post of
head of executive authority is held by a woman, while in 75 (86.2 percent) of
them the post of deputy head is held by a woman. In the 2014 municipal
election, the number of women among municipality members increased from 8.9
percent to 35 percent, and rose from 12.4 percent to 30 percent among
municipally chairs.
The statement also alleges
"the absence of pluralism, including in the media”. The Central Election
Commission considers this allegation completely unfounded because in the
civilized world the media are not required to criticize or even defame
government institutions. The media should remain unbiased in
covering the facts. The Central Election Commission states that there are
currently nearly 500 daily, weekly and monthly print outlets, and nearly 5,000
internet news resources in Azerbaijan, with many of them sharply criticizing
the government`s domestic and foreign policy, head of state and opposition
representatives. Eighty percent of the country`s population are internet users,
nearly 3 million people are social network users. According to observations of
the Central Election Commission, a lot of critical and sometimes even unethical
material was put out by the media and especially by social networks both before
and on election day.
The statement says that "the
11 television stations with nationwide coverage remain the main source of
political information in the country. The ownership structures of these
broadcasters are opaque.” By making this statement, the mission exceeded its mandate.
Each of the 11 channels were registered by the relevant authorities as legal
entities, they are taxpayers and all information is available in open resources
of those authorities.
The statement alleges that
"the fact that defamation is a criminal offense punishable by imprisonment,
with additional penalties for defamation of the president, further limits the
freedom of expression that is key to political campaigning.” In 42 member
states of the Council of Europe, defamation is a criminal offense and in 39 of
them it is punishable by imprisonment. But, the statements on the elections in
the majority of the OSCE member states did not assess defamation as what limits
the freedom of expression that is key to political campaigning. Therefore, this
assessment with respect to Azerbaijan witnesses to a selective and
double-standard approach. It should also be underlined that for many years the
courts in Azerbaijan have not applied imprisonment for defamation.
Unfortunately, the observation mission expressed its view without having any
intention to study this issue.
What surprises the Central
Election Commission the most is that 360 observers (including 270 observers
from OSCE ODIHR) of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, which constituted 40 percent of the total number of foreign
monitors, by tradition, assumed the function of undisputed and supreme judging
authority. The mission`s statement uses the term ‘international observers’
instead of ‘observers of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe’, which, at least, is disrespect for foreign observers
representing 59 countries and numerous international organizations, and a sign
of arrogance.
The Central Election
Commission does not pursue a goal of thoroughly studying this unfounded report,
which is full of contradictions, and hopes that the aforementioned and many
other contradictions featured in the statement of the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on the early presidential
election, which was held in the Republic of Azerbaijan on April 11, 2018, will
be removed. Otherwise, the Central Election Commission will regretfully be
forced to halt cooperation with the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and
Human Rights, whose representatives constitute the majority in the
aforementioned observation mission.
Central Election Commission
Republic of Azerbaijan
Republic of Azerbaijan
Baku, April 13, 2018