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Armenian President Lambasts Opposition

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  • Armenian President Lambasts Opposition

    Associated Press Online
    February 24, 2008 Sunday 1:28 AM GMT


    Armenian President Lambasts Opposition

    By AVET DEMOURIAN, Associated Press Writer

    YEREVAN Armenia


    Armenia's president accused the opposition Saturday of trying to
    seize power in the small ex-Soviet nation as protests against alleged
    fraud in this week's presidential vote entered a fourth day.

    "Our actions will be resolute and harsh and aimed at preserving
    stability and constitutional order," President Robert Kocharian said
    during a meeting with top law enforcement officials.

    The opposition claims Tuesday's presidential vote was rigged and
    demands a recount.

    Election officials said Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian the favorite
    to succeed Kocharian won the election with 53 percent of the vote
    while opposition candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian had 21 percent.

    Thousands of opposition supporters have staged daily rallies in the
    capital since Wednesday and maintained overnight vigils since
    Thursday. They have set up about two dozen tents on the city's main
    square and built campfires to stay warm.

    Several Armenian diplomats who expressed their support for the
    opposition were dismissed by Kocharian on Saturday. They included the
    ambassadors to Italy and Kyrgyzstan, the No. 2 at the Armenian
    Embassy in Ukraine and a deputy foreign minister.

    The diplomats were dismissed after a statement they signed was read
    out to the protesters Saturday.

    Ter-Petrosian denied the president's accusations that the opposition
    was planning to use force.

    "We are for maintaining stability and will act within the law," he
    told journalists after a rally at which an estimated 30,000
    protesters waved flags, raised clenched fists and shouted "Levon!
    Levon!"

    Election observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe said there were concerns about the vote count, but issued a
    generally positive assessment.

    The standoff has raised concerns about stability in the volatile,
    strategic country at the junction of the energy-rich Caspian Sea
    region and southern Europe, with Russia and Iran nearby.

    Memories of economic hardships of the early 1990s and the devastating
    conflict with neighboring Azerbaijan over the territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh are still fresh. Many Armenians long for calm and
    stability.

    Ter-Petrosian was Armenia's first president after its independence
    >From the Soviet Union.
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