Allegations mar Belarus polling
There have been allegations of vote-rigging in Belarus, where people are voting on whether the president should be allowed to stand for a third term.
Both the EU and US have cast doubts on whether the poll is free and fair.
But President Alexander Lukashenko responded to critics by saying the West had problems of its own with elections.
But the BBC has obtained photographs which appear to show ballot papers already marked with ticks for Mr Lukashenko being given to voters.
Irregularities
Alongside the referendum, Belarus is also voting for a new parliament.
On Sunday the BBC was shown what appeared to be evidence of irregularities in the voting.
A series of photographs from one polling station showed ballot papers which had already been marked with ticks beside Mr Lukashenko's name before they had been handed out to voters.
In one photo an elderly woman was given a marked ballot on arrival.
Another image shows further ballots on a table with boxes already ticked.
The head of the Belarussian electoral commission said the allegations were false but the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), which is monitoring the elections, say they are investigating the claims.
Other reports said police had detained a number of people conducting an independent exit poll.
'Calm down' call
Correspondents say the ex-Soviet republic has become ever more isolated under Mr Lukashenko, in power now for a decade.
But after casting his vote in the capital, Minsk, Mr Lukashenko told the BBC Western countries had spent the last 10 years expressing concern about Belarus.
It was time now, he said, for the international community to calm down and to stop accusing his government of election fraud.
Mr Lukashenko's rule has been characterised by the closure of opposition media outlets and the prosecution of opponents.
With the next presidential election due to fall in 2006, he claims that a third term is for the good of the nation but his opponents have accused him of trying to become Belarus' leader for life.
Unlimited terms
The current constitution limits the president to two terms in office but he has already once extended his rule by means of a referendum.
In 1996 he prolonged his first five-year term by two years, to 2001.
He was then re-elected for another five years, in a poll which was criticised as undemocratic by Western observers.
Voters are now being asked whether the constitution should be amended to allow Mr Lukashenko to run for president as many times as he chooses.
For the poll to be valid, at least 50% of the electorate must vote.
Belarussians are also electing a new lower chamber of parliament - the House of Representatives, with as many as 332 candidates running for 110 seats.
There are currently just a handful of opposition MPs in the chamber.
Mr Lukashenko said the 700 international observers were welcome.
"Let them come and monitor - and don't think we are hiding something here," said Mr Lukashenko in the run-up to the poll.
But the US State Department has pointed to the Belarussian government's "persistent and serious infringements of human rights and democracy".
It expressed "serious doubts" that the vote would meet international democratic standards.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/worl...ope/3736312.stm
Allegations mar Belarus polling
Started by
Talon
, Oct 17 2004 09:17 PM
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