2003 Azerbaijani presidential election explained

Country:Azerbaijan
Type:presidential
Previous Election:1998 Azerbaijani presidential election
Previous Year:1998
Next Election:2008 Azerbaijani presidential election
Next Year:2008
Election Date:15 October 2003
Image1:Aliyev April06.jpg
Nominee1:Ilham Aliyev
Party1:New Azerbaijan Party
Popular Vote1:1,860,346
Percentage1:76.84%
Nominee2:Isa Gambar
Party2:Musavat
Popular Vote2:338,145
Percentage2:13.97%
President
Before Election:Heydar Aliyev
Before Party:New Azerbaijan Party
After Election:Ilham Aliyev
After Party:New Azerbaijan Party

Presidential elections were held in Azerbaijan on 15 October 2003. As expected, Ilham Aliyev, son of the outgoing president, Heydar Aliyev, was officially elected with an overwhelming majority in a vote international observers deemed to be not to be free or fair.

The election was characterized by ballot stuffing and manipulated voter lists. The final vote tabulation was kept from OSCE/ODIHR monitors, which meant that they could not judge the accuracy of the results.[1] Police arrested members of electoral commissions who refused to sign paperwork on vote counts from their precincts. The opposition claimed that Gambar had won the election. The opposition protested against the election results, with the Aliyev regime arresting hundreds, including Gambar.[2]

Conduct

Human Rights Watch stated that the "election campaign... from the beginning was heavily manipulated by the government to favor Prime Minister Ilham Aliyev, son of President Heydar Aliyev. The government ensured that election commissions would be stacked to favor Aliyev, and banned nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) from monitoring the vote. As the election drew nearer, government officials openly sided with Ilham Aliyev, obstructed opposition rallies, and sought to limit participation in them. Police have beaten and arbitrarily detained hundreds of opposition activists, including a 73-year-old woman."

The Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe provided 188 election observers. The mission, requested by the United States government, formed part of a larger group of observers monitoring under the auspices of the OSCE. The IDEE observers observed more than 1,000 voting precincts and Constituency Election Centers where votes were tabulated, and collectively issued a "Votum Separatum," which expressed their outrage at election fraud, intimidation and political repression they witnessed during their observation mission and their disagreement with the OSCE's mild preliminary report calling the elections "generally well administered."

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Altstadt, Audrey L. . Frustrated Democracy in Post-Soviet Azerbaijan . 2017 . Columbia University Press . 978-0-231-70456-4 . 77 . 10.7312/alts70456.
  2. Book: Hale, Henry E. . Patronal Politics: Eurasian Regime Dynamics in Comparative Perspective . 2014 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-107-07351-7 . 294 . 10.1017/cbo9781139683524.