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VoA: Rights Group Calls for Investigation into Harsh Treatment

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  • VoA: Rights Group Calls for Investigation into Harsh Treatment

    Rights Group Calls for Investigation into Harsh Treatment of Armenian
    Protesters
    Melanie Sully
    Vienna
    Voice of America.
    14 Apr 2004, 15:48 UTC

    The International Helsinki Federation, a human rights body that
    advises the United Nations, said harsh treatment of anti-government
    protesters in Armenia is a violation of political and human rights and
    that international experts should investigate the abuses.

    The Vienna-based International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights
    (IHF) accused authorities in Armenia of using violence against
    demonstrators, and called for the end of what it says is the
    authoritarian rule of President Robert Kocharian.

    Demonstrations against the Kocharian government have occurred almost
    daily since the beginning of the month.

    The IHF says police used water cannons to break up a rally Tuesday
    near the presidential palace in the capital, Yerevan.

    President Kocharian insisted the measures were necessary to combat
    political extremists who he said were threatening the constitutional
    order.

    However, IHF Director Aaron Rhodes says the oppression is likely to
    lead to more confrontation and instability. "What they [the
    authorities] are doing by disallowing these demonstrations, they are
    really perpetuating disorder," he said. "There are many reports of
    police brutality, and including brutality to journalists and a number
    of people have been beaten in the context of these demonstrations and
    have wound up in hospital."

    Mr. Rhodes added that some journalists had their cameras smashed and
    cell phones were disconnected. He also said that copies of a Russian
    daily newspaper covering the demonstrations were stopped at the border
    and that some television stations were unable to transmit for a time.

    Police were reported to have raided opposition offices, smashing
    computers and detaining activists.

    Mr. Rhodes called for an independent investigation into such incidents
    with experts from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE), of which Armenia is a member. The OSCE has criticized
    recent Armenian presidential and parliamentary elections, saying they
    were flawed.

    The State Department has said it is concerned over the sharp
    escalation in confrontation between the government and its opponents
    in the Caucasus republic, once part of the Soviet Union.
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