Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Latest anti-government rally draws more than 10,000 in Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Latest anti-government rally draws more than 10,000 in Armenia

    Agence France Presse
    April 21, 2004 Wednesday 8:06 AM Eastern Time

    Latest anti-government rally draws more than 10,000 in Armenia

    YEREVAN, April 21


    More than 10,000 demonstrators poured onto the rainy streets of
    Armenia's capital Wednesday, in the latest of a wave of protests
    demanding the resignation of President Robert Kocharian.

    "Kocharian's resignation is necessary in order to organize a new
    presidential election, this one fair," one of the leaders of the
    opposition Justice party, Chavarch Kocharian, told between 10,000 and
    12,000 protestors.

    A new election, in turn, "will enable the organization of fundamental
    changes and true development in the country," said Kocharian, who is
    no relation to the Armenian leader.

    Wednesday's demonstration in Yerevan's central Freedom Square was the
    latest in a string of protests organized this month by opposition
    parties in Armenia, a nation of three million people in the Caucasus
    mountains.

    The Armenian opposition says that Kocharian rigged a run-off
    presidential vote in March 2003 to secure a second term in office and
    is demanding that he either organize a national referendum of
    confidence in his rule or step down.

    On April 13, the police broke up an anti-government demonstration in
    the capital Yerevan using water cannon and reportedly injuring dozens
    of protestors.

    "After April 13 we are living in a new political situation, in a
    police state where terror reigns," Aram Sarkissian, the leader of the
    Democratic Party, told Wednesday's gathering.

    The protests in Armenia, the world's first state to adopt
    Christianity, have drawn comparisons with last year's "rose
    revolution" that ousted the leadership in neighbouring Georgia.

    But despite the widespread discontent in Armenia over low living
    standards, analysts say Kocharian is too strong, and the opposition
    too weak, for the Georgian scenario to be repeated in Armenia.
Working...
X