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Armenia: Spate Of Attacks Against Protesters

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  • Armenia: Spate Of Attacks Against Protesters

    ARMENIA: SPATE OF ATTACKS AGAINST PROTESTERS

    Reuters
    Sept 11 2013

    Source: Human Rights Watch - Thu, 12 Sep 2013 02:00 AM

    A spate of violent attacks against peaceful protesters appears to be
    a concerted effort to intimidate activists and should be effectively
    investigated, Human Rights Watch said in a September 11, 2013 letter to
    the Armenia police chief and to the head of the Special Investigative
    Service. Officials should swiftly bring the attackers to justice
    and make clear that any violence against people for exercising their
    right to peaceful protest will be neither tolerated nor condoned.

    (Berlin) - A spate of violent attacks against peaceful protesters
    appears to be a concerted effort to intimidate activists and should
    be effectively investigated, Human Rights Watch said in a September
    11, 2013 letter to the Armenia police chief and to the head of the
    Special Investigative Service. Officials should swiftly bring the
    attackers to justice and make clear that any violence against people
    for exercising their right to peaceful protest will be neither
    tolerated nor condoned. Human Rights Watch documented attacks
    against five activists in three separate incidents in the past three
    weeks. In each case, unidentified men in civilian clothes set upon
    individual demonstrators late at night after they left protest sites
    in Yerevan, either in front of the city government building or the
    ruling Republican Party headquarters. The victims were cut and bruised,
    and some had concussions or broken bones, including one whose nose was
    broken. "If thugs keep jumping on protesters and beating them up as
    they leave for home, that's hardly a coincidence," said Giorgi Gogia,
    senior South Caucasus researcher at Human Rights Watch. "The police
    and other Armenian authorities need to be prepared to make clear
    that they are going to put a stop to these attacks, starting with
    effective investigations that lead to arrests and prosecutions." In
    all cases Human Rights Watch documented, the police took reports
    from the victims, and in one case police went with the victim to the
    crime scene. However, the victims told Human Rights Watch that the
    investigative authorities did not follow up, even when one of the
    victims was able to identify his suspected attackers. On September
    5, about six unidentified assailants attacked Haykak Arshamyan
    and Suren Saghatelyan, well-known civil society activists, as they
    were returning from a peaceful demonstration in front of the ruling
    Republican Party headquarters to protest President Serzh Sargisyan's
    September 3 announcement that Armenia would join the Russia-led
    customs union. The men attacked Arshamyan as he tried to open the
    garage door in his courtyard, kicking and beating him. "They did not
    say anything, not even cursing, just beating without saying a word,"
    he said. "I shouted and tried to understand why they were beating me,
    but nothing." When Saghatelyan tried to get out of the car to help
    his friend, the assailants also attacked him: "They hit me with
    the car door as I tried to leave, and broke my nose and a finger,
    my head was also cut." Saghatelyan was hospitalized for several
    days for emergency surgery on his broken nose, and Arshamyan was
    treated for multiple bruises that night and discharged. Police took
    statements from both men that night, but they have not informed the
    men of any further investigatory steps. On the night of September 4,
    unidentified assailants attacked Arman Alexanyan, a 21-year-old Yerevan
    State University Information Technology student and civic activist,
    after he left a sit-in at the Yerevan municipal building. Several
    dozen activists have been engaged in round-the-clock protests after a
    temporary price increase for municipal transportation in late July. As
    Alexanyan was returning home around midnight, about 10 young men in
    civilian clothes attacked him, punching and kicking him and berating
    him for taking part in protests. His friends called an ambulance and
    he was hospitalized briefly for bruises and bumps on his head. Police
    took a statement from him at the hospital, and two days later police
    asked him to meet them at the scene for investigation purposes. He
    identified several of his suspected attackers to the police, but to
    the best of his knowledge, police did not take appropriate steps to
    apprehend them. At about 1 a.m. on August 25, about six unidentified
    assailants attacked two youth activists, Babken Der Grigoryan and
    Mihran Margaryan, in the city center shortly after they left the
    municipal building protest. Grigoryan told Human Rights Watch,
    "They told us, 'We know you are coming from the protests' and
    started punching us... They punched me in the chest and body and
    I fell on the ground as they continued to kick me." The activists'
    friends took them to a police station to file an assault report. More
    than two weeks later, as far as they have been able to find out, no
    criminal case has been opened. The investigative authorities should
    take all appropriate measures to investigate these attacks promptly,
    thoroughly, and effectively, Human Rights Watch said. Investigations
    should involve participation of the victims and should be conclusive,
    public, and capable of leading to the identification and prosecution
    of the attackers. "The Armenian authorities need to show that they
    intend to stop attacks on peaceful protesters," Gogia said. "Finding
    and prosecuting the attackers in this spate of cases would be a step
    toward making it clear that the authorities don't condone and won't
    tolerate this kind of violence."

    Any views expressed in this article are those of the author and not
    of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

    http://www.trust.org/item/20130912015341-uxdvj/?source=hppartner

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