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HRW Calls on Armenian Govm't to Investigate Excessive Use of Force

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  • HRW Calls on Armenian Govm't to Investigate Excessive Use of Force

    A1 Plus | 14:23:48 | 29-04-2004 | Politics |

    HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH CALLS ON ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT TO INVESTIGATE EXCESSIVE
    USE OF POLICE FORCE

    On Wednesday, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    (PACE) held an urgent debate on Armenia, calling on the government to
    investigate abuses and to create "fair conditions for the media," and
    warned the government that if no progress on this by September, the
    PACE may "reconsider the credentials of the Armenian delegation."PACE
    also called on the opposition to work within the country's
    constitutional framework.

    In early April, Armenia's political opposition united in mass peaceful
    protests to force a "referendum of confidence" on President Robert
    Kocharian and to call for his resignation. The government responded
    with mass arrests, violent dispersals of demonstrations, and raids on
    opposition party headquarters. Hundreds were detained, many for up to
    15 days, and some were tortured or ill-treated in custody.

    "The Armenian government is repeating the same sorts of abuses that
    called into question the legitimacy of last year's election and
    sparked the protests in the first place," said Rachel Denber, acting
    executive director of Human Rights Watch's Europe and Central Asia
    division. "The cycle of repression must end."

    Excessive police force, particularly at a nonviolent opposition rally
    on the night of April 12, caused dozens of injuries among
    demonstrators. The Human Right Watch briefing paper, based on an
    investigation in Armenia in mid-April, documents this violence and
    other abuses. Human Rights Watch found that some of the worst injuries
    at that rally were caused by stun grenades, which inflicted deep
    wounds in many protesters. Police also beat journalists and
    confiscated their cameras.

    The opposition protests derived from the government's failure to
    redress the deeply flawed 2003 presidential election won by Kocharian,
    the incumbent. At that time, the authorities detained about 250
    opposition activists and supporters in an attempt to intimidate and
    disable the opposition in advance of the vote. The Armenian
    Constitutional Court subsequently recommended that the government hold
    a referendum of confidence. The government rejected the
    recommendation, while the opposition insisted that the referendum be
    held.

    In its report on the 2003 presidential election, the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) found the vote to be "marred
    by serious irregularities," owing to "a lack of sufficient political
    determination by the authorities to ensure a fair and honest process."

    "Armenia has to address the underlying causes of the opposition's
    demonstrations," said Denber. "A first step would be to implement the
    recommendations made by the OS?E following the 2003 elections."

    Human Rights Watch also called on the Armenian government to
    investigate the excessive use of police force on the night of April
    12, and to cease the use of stun grenades and electric-shock equipment
    for the control of nonviolent public demonstrations.

    Armenia's international partners - including the European Union, the
    United States government, the OSCE and the Council of Europe - should
    closely monitor the situation and condemn any new abuses that occur,
    Human Rights Watch said. In particular, the United States and the
    European Union should closely monitor any security-related funding,
    particularly for crowd-control equipment, to ensure that it does not
    fuel human rights abuses.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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