The candidate Eugene Anischenko, who ran for the Dnieper Vorša district, going to watch the vote count at the site №39 (gymnasium №1).
When did the counting of votes, Anischenko came to the table at a distance of about two meters, which potentially gave him the opportunity to see at least some of the papers that laid the commission members. Once Anischenko took a comfortable place, the chairman of the commission (Head of Education Department Zagurskii) stopped counting votes – on the grounds that the alleged Anischenko prevents counting the fact that so closely approached. The Commission drew up a report that was not a problem – the members of the committee were teachers – Zagurskiy subordinates.
Anischenko observers went to the table, from which could be seen the ballots, and, accordingly, could not be seen, whether the members of the commission are distributed correctly. When counting resumed Anischenko, remaining in place for observers, rose. What he tried to watch standing, and was the cause of the second comments and removal from the site.
Despite the fact that the chairman of the Central Election Commission said that in the vote counting observers should be no more than three meters from the committee table, the site at school was the not the only one in Vorša, where observers were not allowed at the table.
So, on a plot №20, which is at the center of children's creativity on the Soviet street, an observer at the beginning of the counting took place approximately two meters from the table, so that he could see at least closest to your piece counting. But after a while the chairman of the committee asked "do not stand over ', and the observer had to stand so that he could not see anything.
Removal from the area too was not a one-time event. At the station №9 observer who was sent to the Party "Fair World", was removed from the site, since it did not have the membership of the party ticket, although the electoral code provides for the extension, on behalf of the party and non-members of these parties.
Independent observers in Vorša focused precisely on the counting of votes, in Vorša observers from democratic institutions and human rights defenders present during the counting of votes in all areas where it was possible, and in large parts of plots on the Dnieper Vorša district. And, as previously stated by observers, the vote count was again opaque. Although this time the commissioners were observers to the persons, not spin, to see for whom specifically laid out the ballots, it was still impossible.
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