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Originally published Wednesday, January 30, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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European watchdog may refuse to monitor the election in Russia

Europe's principal elections watchdog group said Tuesday it may refuse to monitor a second Russian election in a row because the authorities...

The Washington Post

MOSCOW — Europe's principal elections watchdog group said Tuesday it may refuse to monitor a second Russian election in a row because the authorities here have imposed "serious restrictions" on the organization's ability to scrutinize the March 2 presidential elections.

"If the conditions aren't changed, we can't observe," said Curtis Budden, a spokesman for the Warsaw-based Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights.

Budden said a written Russian invitation to the organization, which is an arm of the 55-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, limited the number of observers to 70, much lower than the number allowed at the last presidential election. Moreover, Budden said, observers will not be allowed to enter Russia until three days before the vote.

Russian officials say the March poll will be well observed because they have invited about 400 foreign observers, including some from former Soviet republics and China. The numbers from the OSCE, they contend, are fully within the requirements for OSCE members.

"There will no limits placed on the activities of international election monitors so long as they act within the law," said Vladimir Churov, the head of the Central Elections Commission, on Monday.

OSCE's monitoring group normally conducts both long-term and short-term missions, observing the quality of the campaign for least two months as well as the conduct of voting on the day of the poll. In the last Russian presidential election in 2004, the group had 387 long-term and short-term observers.

Russia has angrily complained that the OSCE, which has criticized the conduct of numerous elections in the post-Soviet world, is a vehicle for the West to undermine Russia and its allies.

Dmitry Medvedev, a first deputy prime minister and Putin's chosen successor, is widely expected to sweep to victory March 2. But the fairness of the process has already been called into question by the opposition here, which cites the disqualification of one candidate, a Putin critic, and alleged bias in favor of Medvedev on the critical national television channels where most Russians get their news.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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