/ 1 February 2008

Russia accuses Europe vote watchdog of ‘sabotage’

Russia accused Europe’s main election watchdog of trying to sabotage plans for monitoring its presidential election next month, the latest round of an increasingly bitter dispute with the West over democracy.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry said the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) monitoring body, ODIHR, was trying to politicise monitoring of the March 2 election, which President Vladimir Putin’s candidate is expected to win easily.

The ODIHR, unhappy that its monitors will only be allowed to start work three days before the vote, rejected suggestions it was playing politics and said Moscow was trying to rewrite its international obligations.

The growing row threatened a repeat of last year’s stand-off, when ODIHR monitors scrapped plans to monitor Russia’s parliamentary elections after complaining of obstructions from Moscow. Putin’s party went on to win a landslide victory.

”Open sabotage continues from within the OSCE for our proposals of joint election monitoring on a collective, agreed upon and mutually acceptable basis,” said Russian Foreign Ministry official Sergei Ryabkov.

”I would like to underline clearly: we will fulfil our obligations to the letter,” he said, adding that Moscow would not go further to accommodate the ODIHR.

The Warsaw-based ODIHR disputed Moscow’s compliance and said that in 150 previous missions, its experts had followed the electoral process for months rather than days.

Russia was ”attempting a unilateral re-interpretation” of its commitments, said ODIHR spokesperson Curtis Budden, in a reaction to the Foreign Ministry’s comments.

”All we’re trying to do is get an opportunity to fulfil our mandate,” he added. ”It’s a mandate Russia gave to us, with the other 55 OSCE participating states.”

The ODIHR has already written to Russia’s Central Election Commission requesting the first of its 70 observers be allowed to start work in early February. It warned this week that it would not monitor the vote unless Moscow eased restrictions.

No decision has yet been taken on whether ODIHR chief Christian Strohal will visit Moscow next week following an invitation from Russian authorities to discuss the starting date of its mission, said the spokesperson.

Opinion polls show most Russians like Putin’s hawkish stance towards the West and want to see Moscow winning respect from abroad, so taking a tough line against election monitors is likely to be popular among voters. — Reuters