South Ossetian presidential election, 2006

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Presidential election in South Ossetia, an unrecognized republic within Georgia, was held on November 12, 2006, coinciding with the South Ossetian independence referendum. Incumbent Eduard Kokoity was seeking a second full five-year term. He was re-elected with more than 98.1%. According to the de facto authorities, the election was monitored by a team of 34 international observers from Germany, Austria, Poland, Sweden and other countries at 78 polling stations.[1] The Ukrainian delegation was led by Nataliya Vitrenko of the Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine. The election process was criticised by local civic society and the results were likely to be inflated.[2]

Contents

[edit] Results

[discuss] – [edit]
Summary of the November 12 2006 South Ossetian election results
Candidates Votes %
Eduard Kokoity 51,150 98.1
Leonid Tibilov 476 0.9
Inal Pukhayev 194 0.37
Oleg Gabodze 175 0.33
Against all 168 0.32
TOTAL 52,443 100.0

[edit] Candidates opposing Kokoity

  • Leonid Tibilov, head of the South Ossetian group within the Joint Control Commission for the Georgian-Ossetian conflict
  • Inal Pukhayev, head of the Tskhinvali district administration
  • Oleg Gabodze, temporarily unemployed

[edit] Alternative elections and referendum

Meanwhile, the South Ossetian opposition politicians, some of whom had left Tskhinvali due to a conflict with the de facto president Eduard Kokoity, set up an alternative Central Election Commission and nominated their candidates for presidency: Gogi Chigoyev, Teimuraz Djeragoyev, Tamar Charayeva, and Dmitry Sanakoyev, who served as defense minister and then as prime minister for several months in 2001 under Kokoity's predecessor, Ludwig Chibirov. Voters were also to answer a question: "do you agree with the renewal of talks with Georgia on a federal union." The alternative elections and referendum were held in the villages with mixed Georgian-Ossetian population not controlled by the secessionist government. The Salvation Union of South Ossetia which organised the election turned down a request from a Georgian NGO, “Multinational Georgia”, to monitor it and the released results were also very likely to be inflated.[2]

Although Georgian government has officially declared both elections illegal[citation needed], Kokoity accused Tbilisi of staging the alternative elections in order to create a "puppet government" in South Ossetia.

[edit] References

  1. ^ S.Ossetia Says ‘International Observers’ Arrive to Monitor Polls, Civil.ge, November 11, 2006
  2. ^ a b Georgia’s South Ossetia Conflict: Make Haste Slowly, Europe Report N°183, 7 June 2007 (free registration needed to view full report)