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Armenia's Opposition President Urges Opposition To Accept Threat

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  • Armenia's Opposition President Urges Opposition To Accept Threat

    ARMENIA'S OUTGOING PRESIDENT URGES OPPOSITION TO ACCEPT THREAT

    Public TV
    Feb 26 2008
    Armenai

    Outgoing Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has called on the
    opposition to end its protests against the result ofthe 19 February
    presidential election, which it says was rigged, and suggested that
    the authorities' patience maybe coming to an end.

    Speaking in an interview broadcast on Armenian Public TV on 26
    February, Kocharyan urged opposition presidentialcandidate Levon
    Ter-Petrosyan and his supporters to accept defeat. "The time has come
    for everyone to sober up and understand that one cannot come to power
    by stubbornness," he said.

    Noting that "we have been very tolerant" and that "no authorities
    in any country would tolerateillegal rallies for six days",
    Kocharyan warned that the situation was undermining confidence in
    thelaw-enforcement system. "The state cannot put up forever with
    violation of the law," he said.

    Kocharyan urged Ter-Petrosyan's supporters, who have been rallying
    in Yerevan since 20 February, "not tobecome a tool in the hands of
    irresponsible political figures". "This is not your game, you will not
    win from this game, you will only lose, and the country will lose,"
    he said.

    Kocharyan said that Ter-Petrosyan, who served as Armenia's first
    president from 1991 to 1998, was at "adead-end" after declaring ahead
    of the election that he would be the winner, and now has no option
    but to keeppeople on the streets. "Ter-Petrosyan was an evil for the
    country, but today he is a great evil for hisentourage," he said.

    According to the official election results, Kocharyan's close ally
    Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan won theelection with 52.8 per cent of
    the vote. Ter-Petrosyan came second with 21.5 per cent.

    Kocharyan described the election as the "best in Armenia's history" and
    insisted that theopposition's accusations of large-scale vote-rigging
    were unfounded. "The election was held at a proper level,the count
    was done correctly, and if there are doubts, there is another entity
    to which the opposition can apply, theConstitutional Court," he said.

    Kocharyan noted that representatives of both the ruling Republican
    Party of Armenia and the opposition were beinginvestigated for election
    violations. "All people responsible for these violations must, of
    course, bepunished," he said.

    Asked about the involvement of military figures in the opposition
    protests, Kocharyan said that Ter-Petrosyan's supporters had
    unsuccessfully tried to enlist the support of officials from various
    state structures, includinglaw-enforcement agencies. "Law-enforcement
    bodies and the military have no right to get involved withpolitics,"
    he insisted. "The isolated cases that existed immediately met with
    a response."

    Referring to a number of Foreign Ministry officials who were dismissed
    after voicing their support for theopposition, Kocharyan urged
    diplomats to "express themselves with restraint".

    Kocharyan reported that the National Security Service had detected
    armed individuals at opposition rallies onYerevan's Freedom Square,
    saying "quite dangerous people" were involved. "Large-scale measures
    have been carried out yesterday and today to render these groups
    harmless," he said.

    Kocharyan said arrests had been made and a significant amount of
    arms confiscated. He said this was done "toprotect the security of
    our people".

    Kocharyan also said that Ter-Petrosyan's supporters had contacts
    with paramilitary "armed formations",including the Yerkrapah Union of
    Veterans. "You know one part of the Yerkrapahs was really involved," he
    said."There were other veteran organizations that were also involved."

    Kocharyan said that action was being taken against those "who are
    inciting this situation" and who"continue organizing illegal rallies
    and marches". "We are obliged to protect the rights of othercitizens,"
    he said, noting there have been "hundreds" of complaints from people
    living near thesquare.

    Kocharyan also spoke of the need to reduce the level of confrontation
    in society. "Armenia has a president-electwho has announced that he is
    the president of the whole people, and not just for those who voted
    for him," he said.He insisted, however, that "extremist expressions
    should be neutralized".

    He also suggested that Sargsyan might be ready to broaden the ruling
    coalition and "involve more forces in theactivities of the government
    than just the Republican Party of Armenia and the Prosperous Armenia
    Party".

    No further processing of Kocharyan's interview (duration 21 minutes)
    is planned.
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