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Opposition Parties Condemn Case Against Ter-Petrosian Allies

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  • Opposition Parties Condemn Case Against Ter-Petrosian Allies

    OPPOSITION PARTIES CONDEMN CASE AGAINST TER-PETROSIAN ALLIES
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Nov 2 2007

    More than a dozen opposition parties have strongly condemned last
    week's arrests of several supporters of former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian and demanded that the Armenian authorities drop
    "baseless" criminal accusations leveled against them.

    The five opposition activists, among them two newspaper editors,
    were formally charged on Tuesday with assaulting police officers who
    tried to stop their October 23 march in Yerevan. The demonstration,
    sanctioned by municipal authorities, was aimed at informing city
    residents about Ter-Petrosian's upcoming rally in the capital. It
    followed the Ter-Petrosian camp's complaints that none of Armenia's
    major television stations agreed to broadcast paid advertisements of
    the event.

    The police claim that the several dozen marchers interfered with
    traffic and disrupted public order by littering the streets with
    leaflets and disturbing residents. But organizers deny this, saying
    that they simply exercised their constitutionally guaranteed rights.

    In a joint statement issued late Thursday, 11 opposition parties, most
    of them allied to Ter-Petrosian, also rejected the official version
    of events. "We declare that police actions against participants of
    the peaceful and legal march are illegal and blatantly violate human
    rights and civil liberties," they said.

    The statement demanded that the authorities end the "baseless criminal
    prosecution" and "hold accountable" the deputy chief of the Yerevan
    police who ordered a special police unit to use force against the
    demonstrators.

    The police actions were also separately condemned by two other
    major opposition parties that have had an uneasy relationship
    with Ter-Petrosian and are unlikely to support him in the upcoming
    presidential election. One of them, the National Democratic Union
    (AZhM), said Armenia has had a poor human rights record and lacked
    rule of law "since 1988," implying that Ter-Petrosian is also to
    blame for the existing situation.

    While deploring the "illegal and unjustified use of force," the
    National Unity Party of Artashes Geghamian, blamed on Friday the
    rising political tensions on both the authorities and "some opposition
    parties and their leaders."
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