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Armenian police raid opposition parties offices

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  • Armenian police raid opposition parties offices

    Armenian police raid opposition parties offices
    (Recasts, updates with police closing parties' headquarters)

    By Hasmik Lazarian
    13 Apr 2004 14:25:16 GMT

    YEREVAN, April 13 (Reuters) - Police raided the offices of Armenia's
    opposition on Tuesday after ending a week of protests which activists
    had hoped would turn into a Georgia-style "rose revolution" against
    President Robert Kocharyan.

    Police finally moved against a rally in the centre of Yerevan on
    Monday night, accusing protesters of throwing stones and petrol
    bombs. The opposition, which accuses Kocharyan of rigging his
    re-election last year, denied the allegation.

    "It's an absolute lie," opposition leader Stepan Demirchyan, second to
    Kocharyan in last year's poll, told reporters. "People were peaceful
    -- singing, dancing and waiting for Kocharyan's resignation."

    Police said they had made arrests and several people had been hurt.
    Opposition newspaper Aravot said they had used tear gas and water
    cannons to break up the demonstration, the latest in a series of
    protests launched last week. The rallies were the biggest in the
    ex-Soviet state since the presidential election.

    "After the police broke up the rally, many of the participants took
    refuge in the party office," said Iveta Sarksyan, an official of
    Demirchyan's Justice Party.

    "Police forced their way in and took away the protesters. They later
    broke the doors to the party press office. Now they're all in the
    police station."

    Police also broke down the door of the office of a second opposition
    party, National Unity and blocked access to a third, the Republic
    Party.

    A poor landlocked state of 3.8 million people, Armenia is key to
    unravelling the deadlock over the Nagorno-Karabakh region of
    Azerbaijan taken over by its mainly Armenian population in 1988. Some
    35,000 died in six years of fighting.

    A ceasefire ended the violence in 1994, but the unresolved dispute
    between Armenia oil-rich Azerbaijan has added risk to Western energy
    firms' investments in the region.

    CONFIDENCE VOTE

    Protesters on Monday had intended marching down the capital's main
    thoroughfare towards the presidential office.

    Opposition activists demand Kocharyan's resignation and had pledged
    protests throughout this week. They also want to change a law on
    referendums to hold a confidence vote in Kocharyan.

    Kocharyan has accused his rivals of trying to stage a repeat of last
    year's "rose revolution" in neighbouring Georgia.

    Last November, protesters rebelled against veteran Georgian President
    Eduard Shevardnadze, accusing him of rigging a parliamentary
    election. In less than two weeks the campaign, supported by the West,
    toppled Shevardnadze.

    Kocharyan had run Nagorno-Karabakh and became Armenian president in
    1998 on a wave of personal popularity.

    But he has made little progress in solving the conflict. Nor have the
    lives of impoverished Armenians improved.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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