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Armenian leader rules out Georgian-style revolt

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  • Armenian leader rules out Georgian-style revolt

    Armenian leader rules out Georgian-style revolt

    By Ron Popeski

    MOSCOW, April 15 (Reuters) - Armenian President Robert Kocharyan,
    interviewed ahead of a new rally by opponents demanding he step down,
    said on Thursday his country in no way resembled next-door Georgia
    where protests unseated its leader.

    Police in the ex-Soviet state broke up a rally on Monday in the
    Armenian capital Yerevan and officials said demonstrations staged
    without permission would no longer be tolerated.

    Police took no action on Thursday as 400 human rights activists,
    supporting neither Kocharyan nor the opposition, gathered in Yerevan
    to denounce the use of force. Opposition parties pledged to stage a
    new mass gathering on Friday.

    Kocharyan admitted the catalyst for the protests, up to 20,000 strong
    last week, was the bloodless revolution which ousted veteran leader
    Eduard Shevardnadze in Georgia next door.

    "The Armenian opposition, encouraged by the Georgian 'velvet
    revolution', has clearly decided that the situation in the country
    will enable them to achieve the same outcome," Kocharyan told Russian
    state television.

    "But the situation cannot be compared, given the economy and growth,
    in double figures for the past three years, and the solid position of
    authorities."

    Police had done their job "quickly, clearly and professionally" to
    halt an illegal meeting threatening the head of state. And protesters,
    he said, should not be deluded into thinking the entire country was
    caught up in their movement.

    "This is, rather, on a quite small political stage. The country has
    carried on in the past and will continue to do so. People are working
    as usual," he said.

    "I think the fuss raised over this far outweighs the importance of
    what actually occurred."

    ELECTION FRAUD, REFERENDUM

    The opposition accuses Kocharyan of securing re-election fraudulently
    last year and wants changes to legislation to allow for a country-wide
    referendum on confidence in him.

    Opposition politicians vowed to disregard the ban and gather in
    Yerevan's Freedom Square on Friday.

    "There is no such thing as an authorised demonstration in Armenia,"
    said Stepan Demirchyan, leader of the Justice Party and second place
    finisher to the president last year.

    He was cautious about calls from Kocharyan's allies to meet to settle
    differences over legislation and the constitution.

    Talks, Demirchyan said, could only take place when those behind
    "violence and lawlessness" were brought to account and last year's
    election irregularities were resolved.

    Former Yerevan Mayor Artashes Gegamyan, third in last year's
    presidential contest, said he would meet only Armenia's top leaders
    and then only if talks were broadcast live.

    Police raided the offices of Armenia's opposition after Monday's
    protests in which about 30 people were injured.

    Landlocked Armenia is key to unravelling a dispute over the region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh -- populated by ethnic Armenians but run by
    Azerbaijan since the 1920s. Some 35,000 died in six years of fighting
    after the region broke from Azerbaijan in 1988.

    Kocharyan had run Nagorno-Karabakh and became Armenian president in
    1998. But he has made little progress in solving the conflict or in
    improving the lives of destitute Armenians.

    (Additional reporting by Hasmik Lazarian in Yerevan)



    04/15/04 17:01 ET

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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