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P o s i t i o n

David and Goliath: Local Elections in Belarus

Minsk Memorandum on Democratic Local Elections

Minsk, Belarus and Munich, Germany, 25 Februar 2003

Deutsche Version



Elections in Belarus.


Local elections are scheduled for 2 March 2003. These elections for local councils will be neither free nor fair. Well in advance of the polling date, the opposition has complained about the restrictions and repression exercised by executive authorities in the countries. On Valentine's Day, young members of the opposition carrying posters that read "I love Belarus" were arrested in Minsk. Opposition politicians are barred from the elections with specious arguments. The editors of regional newspapers are protesting the pressure exerted by the Lukashenko regime. As in the past, fundamental democratic principles are not being observed in Belarus. International standards being ignored include the OSCE standards set at the Copenhagen summit of 1990, the OSCE Practical Guidelines to Best Practices in Democratic Elections (November 2002), the Universal Declaration on Human Rights and the European Convention on Human Rights. International and domestic election observers have documented violations of OSCE democratic standards in the local elections in 1998, parliamentary elections in 2000 and presidential elections in 2001.
Despite the unjust conditions, representatives of the democratic spectrum in Belarus have decided to campaign for office in the current local elections. Their goal is to work within the system and to democratize it from below. The Belarusian Union of Young Politicians, the youth organization of the United Civil Party, is participating in the electoral campaign and presenting candidates for the local councils. As part of a cooperative project with the Center for Applied Policy Research (C·A·P), the Belarusian Union of Young Politicians has written a memorandum on democratic local elections.


Minsk Memorandum on Democratic Local Elections

Local elections are a fundamental element of a democratic system. Creating democratic, effective and transparent local politics is one of the challenges of transformation. To lend the political system legitimacy, to exercise participation and control, to articulate political interests and to recruit new persons for the political process, elections must fulfil democratic standards. The local elections on 2 March 2003 in Belarus fail to meet this test. For the fulfillment of minimal democratic standards, we demand:

1. Reform of the electoral law: The electoral law must be changed to stipulate that the members of the electoral commission should represent the entire political spectrum. The electoral law must make a free, fair and even-handed election campaign possible.
Under the current law and practices, the members of the electoral commission are nominated by the executive and the legislature. Half of the members of the central electoral commission are appointed by President Lukashenko. In local electoral districts, the are nominated solely by the executive. The opposition is underrepresented on the electoral commissions. Their decisions on the approval of candidates and the counting of votes are neither democratic nor transparent.

2. Complaint and appeals processes: The electoral law must provide for uniform complaint and appeals processes, which are accessible as fair and transparent instruments for the entire political spectrum.
The current legal and actual opportunities to lodge appeals of decisions from the electoral commissions are limited. There is no uniform procedure to appeal decisions of the central electoral commission. If, despite these obstacles, an appeal is filed, the decisions generally fall in favor of the executive. The electoral process can have only limited legitimacy as long as the opposition criticizes the transparency and fairness of the appeals process, thus calling into question the decisions it renders.

3. Expansion of candidates' rights according to democratic norms: The formal conditions for the approval of candidates may no longer be used as a restrictive instrument to exclude the opposition. Registration of candidates must conform to democratic and transparent principles.
The registration of candidates and the examination of the signatures that support candidates are being abused as instruments to exclude candidates from the elections. Each candidate only requires 150 signature to validate the candidacy, but the examination of these signatures opens the door for administrative shenanigans. Candidates from the opposition are often accused of having falsified signatures and are excluded from the elections on these or similar grounds. The requirement that candidates must declare their income also serves to exclude representatives of the opposition.

4. A free, fair and democratic campaign: The candidates must have both legal and actual opportunities to organize their campaigns.
According to the electoral law, campaigns are financed exclusively with public funds. Candidates in the local elections have approximately 40 euros for their campaigns. Private support for a party or a candidate flows to the state fund that finances all elections. Campaign materials that insult or defame incumbents are forbidden. The broad scope for defining what materials are insulting or defaming considerably limits democratic campaigning. Official arbitrariness in these decisions cannot be ruled out. These conditions de facto considerably reduce freedom of speech and the freedom to express opinions. They also serve to increase the uncertainty of opposition election campaigns.

5. Freedom of the press: Pluralistic media and fair access to the media are an indispensable condition for democracy.
The electoral law proclaims equal access to state media. Reality is often different. The multiplicity of limits and restrictions hinders opposition candidates and works to the advantage of Lukashenko-friendly incumbents. The media, particularly audio-visual media, do not deliver balanced coverage.

6. Independent domestic and international election observers: Election observation should be supported, and not hindered, by officeholders.
Domestic (with representatives of all candidates) and international (with representatives of the OSCE and the Council of Europe) election observation is an important instrument for strengthening democracy. While the electoral law provides for domestic and international observers, but their activities are hindered, both legally and practically, by restrictive regulations and intransparent ordinances.

7. Campaigns oriented toward citizens and practical problems as a starting-point for democratic regional politics: Local election campaigns must identify local problems and interests, must propose solutions and must formulate these proposals in programs. Eligibility for office should be strictly tied to whether a candidate actually lives in a given electoral district.
A workers' collective can nominate candidates who are thus primarily tied to the firm, which in Belarus is generally state-owned. Employees of the executive branch campaign on programs that primarily come from their current area of authority. These thus seem unrealistic and discredit democratic fundamentals when, for example, the leader of a local social services authority demands improvement of the state social services for which she is already responsible.

8. A new definition of the constitutionally-specified powers of the local executive and legislative branches: The rights of local councils to set and control their budgets must be strengthened. Decentralization should be understood as an instrument for strengthening democracy from below and for more effective recognition of state responsibility. To meet these goals, the tax system and the federal system of financing must be reformed and adequate regulations for expenditures must be implemented.
Part of the Soviet inheritance of Belarus is a centralized state, which is dominated by the office of President Lukashenko. The heads of the regional authorities are appointed by the president. The local governments' constitutionally-mandated sphere of authority is so limited that they are also dominated by the presidential autocracy.


Links

OSCE/ODIHR Belarus
(Monitoring Belarusian electoral law and election observation)

Document of the Copenhagen Meeting of the Conference on the Human Dimension of the OSCE, Copenhagen 1990

Central Electoral Commission of the Republic of Belarus
(Constitution, electoral law, etc. in Russian)

United Civil Party
(Belarusian Union of Young Politicians)

Charta 97
(Belarusian civil rights organization)

Center for Applied Policy Research, Munich


Contact

Dr. Iris Kempe
E-Mail: iris.kempe@lrz.uni-muenchen.de


  D o w n l o a d

Minsk Memorandum
(russian version, pdf)

 
           
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