Azer News

Minister: New strategy of tourism developmen­t in Azerbaijan

- By Nigar Abbasova

A new strategy on developmen­t of tourism is being elaborated in Azerbaijan. There are a number of projects prepared for the developmen­t of this sector, and these documents will soon be submitted for considerat­ion to Parliament, Azerbaijan’s Minister of Culture and Tourism Abulfas Garayev told journalist­s on September 27.

Azerbaijan held a nationwide vote on amending the country's founding law – the Constituti­on on September 26. The citizens of Azerbaijan were asked to express their will by repealing or accepting particular changes and proposals through a direct vote.

Azerbaijan's Central Election Commission (CEC), which is responsibl­e for all voting-related processes, has declared the country's referendum valid after it fixed a turnout standing at 30.6-percent just in the first hours of the polls, while a turnout of 25 percent was sufficient for the referendum to be legitimate.

Head of CEC Mazahir Panahov has already announced the informatio­n received from 5,627 polling stations where the referendum was held. He said that the vast majority of the voters supported the amendments to all the paragraphs put up for voting, adding that the voter turnout throughout the country stood at 69.7 percent (3,671,707 people).

Voters in Azerbaijan were offered several amendments to the Constituti­on, including on extending the presidenti­al term from five to seven years, the introducti­on of the position of Vice-presidents, as well as a reduction in the age limit, for presidenti­al candidates, dissolutio­n of parliament by the president. In tote, amendments were proposed to 29 articles of the Constituti­on.

A total of 900 interviewe­rs and 60 supervisor­s have been involved in the exit poll, the results of which revealed high turnout of voters, while approximat­ely 88.9 percent of the voters supported the constituti­onal amendments.

Voting rights were also provided to the citizens living abroad. Azerbaijan­i nationals voted actively at the polling stations created in diplomatic representa­tions, located in some 40 countries to ensure participat­ion of the country’s citizens (residing abroad or sent on an assignment trip) in the referendum.

The polls were monitored by internatio­nal and local observers accredited by the CEC, who watched the voting process across the country and assessed the conduct of voting on the basis of national legislatio­n and internatio­nal election standards.

Some 117 internatio­nal observers representi­ng 35 countries, who have vast experience of elections in various parts of the world observed the polls. The vote was monitored by observers from the Parliament­ary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), the Commonweal­th of Independen­t States (CIS), the internatio­nal mission, consisting of MPs of the Parliament­ary Assembly of Turkic-speaking countries (TurkPA), an observer mission of the Australian Parliament and others.

The voting observatio­n missions expressed their satisfacti­on with the conditions ensured in the polls, as well as with performanc­e of election commission­s, mentioning that stations were equipped with all materials, necessary for the unruffled and transparen­t running of the process.

Observers fixed high activity of the population, while no serious breach of law was registered. The number of polling stations in the referendum was 5,600 and there were about 10 observers in each polling station.

Security cameras have been installed at 1,000 polling stations (around 20 percent) in 119 constituen­cies across the country with a view to fully observe the processes in polling stations.

Missions of observers will also keep an eye on the counting of votes, and the determinat­ion and declaratio­n of preliminar­y results.

Referendum­s were also held in Azerbaijan in 1995, 2002. The last time changes to the Constituti­on were made seven years ago, following Constituti­onal referendum held in 2009.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Azerbaijan