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Government Forcibly Breaks Up Opposition Protest

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  • Government Forcibly Breaks Up Opposition Protest

    GOVERNMENT FORCIBLY BREAKS UP OPPOSITION PROTEST

    April 13, 2004
    Eurasianet

    Police in Armenia used stun grenades and water cannon to disperse an
    opposition protest during the early hours of April 13 in Yerevan. In
    addition, authorities closed the offices of two leading opposition
    political parties involved in organizing the demonstration, which
    President Robert Kocharian said threatened the country's
    "constitutional order."

    Officials did not immediately disclose information concerning the
    number of people hurt during the police crackdown. They also released
    few details about the number of opposition political activists taken
    into custody. Armenian media reports indicated that dozens of people
    were severely beaten by truncheon-wielding police, who descended on
    about 2,000 opposition supporters camping out on Yerevan's main road,
    Marshal Baghramian Avenue, not far from theArmenian parliament
    building. According to one unofficial estimate, 30 people required
    hospitalization. One individual was reportedly in serious condition,
    while 14 were supposedly treated and released from area hospitals.

    The assault began at about 2 am, with columns of police clad in riot
    gear moving against demonstrators from at least two directions, in
    what observers said was a maneuver designed to trap the
    protesters. Eyewitnesses reported that authorities indiscriminately
    beat protesters. Many journalists, in particular photographers and
    television camera operators, became embroiled in the melee. The
    Aykakan Zhamanak newspaper, for example, reported that two of its
    correspondents were "badly beaten."

    Authorities insisted that protesters had provoked police. Interior
    Minister Sayat Shirinian alleged that the demonstrators had ignored
    warnings to disperse peacefully, and later started to move
    "menacingly" towards law-enforcement officers, state television
    reported. Kocharian justified the police action as necessary to combat
    "political extremism."

    One of the protest organizers, Stepan Demirchian, head of the Justice
    bloc and a bitter political foe of Kocharian's, said the police action
    constituted a "crime" designed to "terrorize the population." Artashes
    Geghamian -- leader of the National Unity Party, and another main
    protest organizer - characterized the police action on April 13 as a
    "barbaric act," the Arminfo news agency reported. Geghamian along with
    several other prominent opposition figures went into hiding.

    Authorities on April 13 shuttered the offices of the National Unity
    Party and the Republic Party, both of them vocal critics of
    Kocharian's administration. The offices were ransacked, according to
    media reports. Three opposition MPs -- Shavarsh Kocharian, Aleksan
    Karapetian and Arshak Sadoian, were taken into custody. According to
    some reports, Kocharian (no relation to the president) was later
    released.

    Foreign governments refrained from making any immediate comment on the
    violence. German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer is scheduled to
    arrive inYerevan next week, and German embassy official gave no
    indication that the trip might be postponed. The Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe sought to stake out neutral ground,
    indicating that both sides had engaged in action in recent days that
    contributed to the violence.

    The April 13 police action was the culmination of four days of
    opposition protests organized with the specific aim of forcing
    Kocharian's resignation. [For additional information see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. Demirchian, Geghamian and other opposition say
    Kocharian's administration is illegitimate, alleging that he rigged
    2003 presidential and parliamentary elections. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive].

    On April 12, a protest march involving between 10,000-15,000
    opposition supporters marched through central Yerevan in a largely
    peaceful manner. Security forces ultimately blocked the protesters
    from approaching Kocharianâ=80=99s executive offices, located on
    Marshal Baghramian Avenue, and roughly 2,000 protestors decided to
    camp out in central Yerevan overnight. That set the stage for the
    pre-dawn violence.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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