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Armenian protestors defy police crackdown

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  • Armenian protestors defy police crackdown

    Armenian protestors defy police crackdown

    Agence France Presse
    March 1 2008

    YEREVAN (AFP) - Thousands of Armenians defied a crackdown Saturday
    and massed in the capital Yerevan hours after police dispersed a
    rally and put opposition chief Levon Ter-Petrosian under house arrest.

    About 8,000 opposition supporters protesting alleged rigging of
    the February 19 presidential election in the former Soviet republic
    gathered near the mayor's office and several embassies.

    "Serzh out! Serzh out!" the crowd chanted, referring to the official
    winner of the election, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

    Demonstrators clambered over a barricade of buses parked across an
    avenue by the security forces and one police car was set ablaze.

    Both sides appeared keen to avoid confrontation, however. Riot police
    pulled back and opposition leaders urged calm.

    "Do not provoke scuffles," Stepan Demirchian, head of the Popular
    Party, instructed.

    The opposition's show of defiance came shortly after riot police
    stormed Freedom Square, by Yerevan's opera house, to clear a hard
    core of some 1,500 protesters, who had been camping there around the
    clock since the election.

    Police could be seen beating several protestors and the health
    ministry reported that 31 people, including six police officers,
    had been injured in the operation.

    Among those arrested was former prime minister Hrant Bagratian,
    said Arman Musinian, a spokesman for Ter-Petrosian's party.

    Ter-Petrosian himself, the opposition leader, defeated presidential
    candidate and former president of the mountainous country, said he
    had been placed under house arrest following the crackdown.

    "Police took me home. Now I am confined to my residence," he told
    journalists at his Yerevan apartment.

    Ter-Petrosian ran on an anti-corruption platform and alleged massive
    fraud in the election to replace outgoing President Robert Kocharian.

    The mass protests echoed other street movements that have brought
    down governments in neighbouring ex-Soviet Georgia, as well as Ukraine
    and Kyrgyzstan following disputed elections in the last four years.

    Observers from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) have already said that the election "mostly" met international
    standards.

    But in a statement posted on their website Saturday, the current OSCE
    chairman Finnish Foreign Minister Ilkka Kanerva, condemned the use
    of force against peaceful demonstrators in Yerevan.

    "I urge the authorities to use maximum restraint," he said.

    "I am troubled that there are reports of casualties. I urge the
    authorities to release those detained, and I again call on the
    government and the opposition to engage in dialogue," the minister
    said.

    The opposition accuses Sarkisian, who was backed by Kocharian, of
    having used state resources to promote his candidacy, while activists
    campaigning for Ter-Petrosian across the country were beaten up.

    Though both the round-the-clock tent camp and massive daytime rallies
    remained peaceful, the authorities had been warning that their patience
    was wearing thin.

    Kocharian has described the protests as an attempt at an illegal
    power grab and promised the government's response would be "decisive
    and firm."

    Sarkisian tried to reach out to opponents and on Friday signed a
    coalition deal with the third-placed candidate, Artur Baghdasarian.

    Sarkisian also said that a deal could soon be made with another
    opposition leader, Vahan Hovannisian, who heads the nationalist
    party Dashnaktsutiun.

    Official results gave 52.9 percent of the vote to Sarkisian and 21.5
    percent to Ter-Petrosian.
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