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Thousands Rally In Fresh Protest Against Armenian Poll

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  • Thousands Rally In Fresh Protest Against Armenian Poll

    THOUSANDS RALLY IN FRESH PROTEST AGAINST ARMENIAN POLL

    AFP
    Friday February 22, 2008

    Around 15,000 opposition activists rallied in the centre of the
    Armenian capital Yerevan on Friday on a third day of protests against
    alleged voting fraud in the ex-Soviet state's presidential poll.

    Opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian was due to address the
    unauthorised rally, the latest in a series protesting Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian's win in Tuesday's ballot that began on Wednesday.

    Protesters chanted "Levon for President" and waved flags and photos
    of Ter-Petrosian as they prepared to march across the city.

    At least 25,000 people rallied on Thursday and the opposition upped
    the stakes by setting up a camp of around a dozen tents in Yerevan's
    Freedom Square without the required authorisation.

    Protesters spent the night huddled around campfires and wrapped in
    blankets against the bitter cold. They said they would protest until
    Ter-Petrosian is recognised as the true winner of the election.

    "We'll sweep away the powers-that-be. We will fight to the end,"
    53-year-old Razmik Safarian, one of the activists, told AFP.

    Mkhitar Aslanian, 23, said: "This is only the beginning. We're planning
    a long struggle... In the end, we have to win."

    During the night, volunteers handed out hot tea and pies as protesters
    watched replays of past rallies and Ter-Petrosian speeches projected
    on to a large screen set up in the square.

    Ter-Petrosian was the country's president between 1991 and 1998. After
    leaving the presidency, he retired from politics and only returned last
    year, building up a powerful campaign against government corruption.

    Official results from the election gave 52.9 percent of the vote to
    Sarkisian, the choice of outgoing President Robert Kocharian, who is
    obliged to step down after his second term.

    Ter-Petrosian, who trailed with 21.5 percent, has described the
    election as "shameful," alleging that dozens of his activists were
    beaten and that ballot stuffing, multiple voting and voter intimidation
    were widespread.

    Observers from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe described the election as "mostly" in line with international
    standards.

    Kocharian hand-picked the prime minister to succeed him after
    Sarkisian's Republican Party of Armenia swept parliamentary polls
    last May.

    Together, the prime minister and president have been credited with
    ensuring relative stability and strong growth. But critics accuse
    the government of tolerating widespread corruption and cracking down
    on opponents.

    Analysts predict Sarkisian will follow Kocharian's policies,
    pursuing close ties with Moscow and a hawkish stance in relations
    with neighbouring Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    The latter two have cut diplomatic ties and sealed their borders
    with Armenia over its support for Armenian separatists in the rebel
    Azerbaijani region of Nagorny Karabakh.

    Ankara has also been angered by Yerevan's campaign to have the World
    War I-era mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire recognised
    as genocide.

    Ter-Petrosian has called for a more conciliatory approach with
    Azerbaijan and Turkey.
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