World
CIS, OSCE observers say Belarus elections democratic
Topic: Presidential elections in Belarus-2010

CIS, OSCE observers say Belarus elections democratic
© RIA Novosti. Sergei SamokhinRelated News
St. Petersburg newspaper photographer held at Belarus rally
Belarusian opposition candidates demand cancelation of election results
Belarus' Alexander Lukashenko re-elected to fourth term
Incumbent Belarus president Lukashenko wins landslide
Belarusian opposition candidate taken to police station from hospital - wife
Belarus opposition tries to storm government building
OSCE could give higher assessment to Belarus elections
Belarus police say no comments on opposition's detention
Belarus: Between Russia and the EU
Multimedia
Observers from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) believe that the presidential elections in Belarus were transparent and democratic.
Incumbent Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko won a landslide victory in Sunday's presidential elections amid accusations of vote rigging and mass arrests in the country's capital.
"We believe that these elections were transparent and met the requirements of the election legislation and common democratic norms," CIS Executive Secretary Sergei Lebedev told reporters in Minsk.
"Our mission has not uncovered facts that would shed doubt on the legitimacy of these elections," he said adding that his colleagues from the OSCE shared this opinion.
With 100% of the ballots counted, Belarus' Central Election Commission (CEC) said on Monday citing preliminary results: incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko gained 79.67percent, winning a fourth term, while his closest rival, opposition candidate Andrei Sannikov, received 2.56 percent of the votes.
The remaining eight runners had 0.48% to 1.97%, while 6.47% voted against all candidates. CEC head Lidiya Yermoshina said the voter turnout was 90.66%.
The vote count was delayed due to protests. Thousands of protestors tried to storm the government building, breaking windows and seizing batons from police, but were eventually dispersed. The demonstrators and police accused each other of provoking clashes that saw a few people on both sides injured.
Over 600 people were detained, and the protest leaders face charges of organizing mass riots.
"Law enforcement bodies knew about the intentions of some of the candidates to hold unauthorized mass rallies," the Belarusian Interior Ministry said on its website on Monday.
MINSK, December 20 (RIA Novosti)

Add to blog
You may place this material on your blog by copying the link.
Publication code:
Preview:

Send by e-mail
Leave a comment
Most read
Top multimedia

Image Galleries: North Pole: Living on the Top of the World

Video: Polar Night at Drifting North Pole Station: Archive Footage

Infographics: Powerful Ship-Borne Laser System

Cartoons: Polar Explorer Day










