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Armenian police break up opposition rally

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  • Armenian police break up opposition rally

    BC-ARMENIA (PICTURE)
    Armenian police break up opposition rally
    By Hasmik Lazarian
    YEREVAN, April 13 (Reuters) - Armenian police broke up an
    opposition rally early on Tuesday in the centre of Yerevan
    called to demand the resignation of President Robert Kocharyan.
    "Overnight, police were forced to dissolve the protest
    action. Arrests were made and several people were injured,"
    police spokesman Sayat Shirimyan said without giving details.
    Several hundred people had stayed on to continue their
    action overnight after police blocked several thousand
    protesters marching down Bagramyan Prospekt, the capital's main
    thoroughfare, towards the presidential office on Monday.
    The police action was briefly reported by Yerevan's public
    television. Russia's Itar-Tass news agency said police used
    water cannons to break up the rally.
    Kocharyan, accused by opposition of rigging his re-election
    in 2003, has in turn accused his political rivals of attempts to
    repeat last year's "rose revolution" in neighbouring Georgia.
    Opposition parties are demanding Kocharyan's resignation and
    have pledged to hold rallies throughout this week.
    Last November, protesters rebelled against veteran Georgian
    leader Eduard Shevardnadze, accused by opponents of rigging a
    parliamentary election. In less than two weeks the campaign,
    supported by the West, toppled Shevardnadze.
    Kocharyan had run Nagorno-Karabakh -- a territory populated
    by ethnic Armenians which broke away from rule by mainly Muslim
    Azerbaijan in Soviet times -- and became Armenian president in
    1998 on a wave of personal popularity.
    But he has made little progress in solving the conflict over
    the territory in which more than 35,000 people have died. Nor
    have the lives of impoverished Armenians improved.
    Participants in the Yerevan rally want to change a law on
    referendums to hold a confidence vote in Kocharyan. The
    Constitutional Court had proposed such a vote after Kocharyan's
    re-election last March, but authorities took no action.
    International observers say parliamentary elections last
    year had less fraud than the presidential poll two months
    earlier, but fell short of international standards.

    Reut01:33 04-13-04

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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