Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Leader Blames Protests On "Irresponsible Politicians"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Leader Blames Protests On "Irresponsible Politicians"

    ARMENIAN LEADER BLAMES PROTESTS ON "IRRESPONSIBLE POLITICIANS"

    Interfax News Agency
    Russia & CIS
    February 27, 2008
    Russia

    Outgoing Armenian President Robert Kocharian claimed that current
    protests by the opposition against the official results of the February
    19 presidential election were the work of "irresponsible politicians"
    and urged protesters to "come to [their] senses."

    According to official announcements, Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan
    received 52.82% of votes in the election and won while former president
    Levon Ter-Petrosian mustered 21.5% and Artur Bagdasarian 17.7% of
    the vote.

    Supporters of Ter-Petrosian, who was Armenia's first post-Soviet
    president and was in office from 1991-98, have been holding public
    actions in Yerevan since February 20, demanding the annulment of the
    official election results.

    "Don't be a weapon in the hands of irresponsible politicians. It is
    not your game," Kocharian said in a televised address.

    "No authorities in any country in the world would tolerate processions,
    rallies or other actions that were unsanctioned," he said.

    "It's the time to wake up, come to one's senses," Kocharian said.

    Besides Kocharian said, that Armenian authorities have taken measures
    to neutralize armed units trying to destabilize the situation in the
    country following the recent presidential elections.

    "I can say that measures to neutralize criminal groups were pursued
    yesterday and today. Large amounts of weapons and ammunition have
    been seized. Particular individuals have been detained," he said on
    Armenian Public Television.

    "What is most dangerous is that part of Yerkrap [an organization of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh war veterans] and some other veteran organizations
    have been involved in the internal political processes," he said.

    In addition, those "responsible for vote rigging during the elections"
    have been detained, he said.

    "These are not only opposition members. There are members of the
    Republican Party and other political groups among those detained,"
    he said.

    Law enforcement are also detaining "those who have organized
    unsanctioned processions and demonstrations, ignoring interests of
    other people," he said.

    In particular, residents of the houses adjacent to Freedom Square in
    Yerevan, where the opposition has been holding a rally to protest the
    official outcomes of the presidential elections, are complaining that
    the rally caused them inconvenience, he said.

    The law enforcement agencies are taking measures "to provide the
    people's security and calm," Kocharian said.

    >From one's part Armenia's president-elect, Prime Minister Serzh
    Sargsyan, has offered peace to the opposition, which claims he won
    last week's election through rigging.

    "I call upon you to eradicate your hatred," Sargsyan told a rally
    in Yerevan on Tuesday in addressing opposition supporters who were
    simultaneously holding another rally in the capital.

    The premier called those who had gathered at the opposition rally
    "our brothers and sisters." "It is love for a prosperous Armenia that
    has brought them there," he said.

    But he accused opposition leaders of devious motives. "I know these
    people quite well, but I'm not someone who would allow them to go on
    with their actions. I will make maximum efforts to have these actions
    eradicated," he said.

    "Democracy cannot accept lies and falsification," Sargsyan said.

    "We face absolutely different tasks, we need to re-address the
    expectations of the people."

    "Today is not the time for division, today is the time for work,"
    the president-elect said.
Working...
X