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Armenia's opposition announces plans to overthrow president

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  • Armenia's opposition announces plans to overthrow president

    Channel News Asia, Singapore
    March 31 2004

    Armenia's opposition announces plans to overthrow president

    YEREVAN : Armenian opposition deputies, who had boycotted parliament
    since February to protest against the rule of President Robert
    Kocharyan, returned there to announce that they intended to
    peacefully overthrow the head of state.

    "A few days ago, the leaders of the Justice opposition bloc and the
    National Unity party, Stepan Demirchyan and Artashes Geramyan,
    announced they had started a process to topple Kocharyan's regime,"
    said Viktor Dallakyan, a deputy with the Justice opposition party.

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    "To that end, popular meetings will be organized. The opposition is
    beginning a democratic revolution," Dallakyan added as he was
    addressing parliament.

    The opposition had boycotted sessions of the parliament after it
    failed to pass changes that would have allowed for a national vote of
    confidence in Kocharyan.

    Dallakyan said the opposition wanted to force Kocharyan to resign and
    then intended to organize a new presidential election.

    Armenia's ruling coalition accused the opposition of trying to
    destabilize the country.

    "These calls for disobedience, which may bring about destabilization,
    are unacceptable," the Republican party, which belongs to the ruling
    coalition, said in a statement.

    In neighboring Georgia, mass rallies organized by US-educated
    opposition leader Mikhail Saakashvili late last year resulted in the
    peaceful overthrow of veteran leader Eduard Shevardnadze, following
    controversial parliamentary elections.

    Saakashvili was then elected president by an overwhelming majority of
    voters in January, and his party went on to win parliamentary
    elections held last Sunday.

    Armenia's opposition had contested Kocharyan's April 2002 re-election
    to the small Caucasus nation's Constitutional Court. The court ruled
    the election valid but, after mass demonstrations, suggested that a
    confidence referendum be held.

    Kocharyan's re-election as president was marred by fraud, according
    to international observers, and was followed by near-daily street
    protests.

    The tiny former Soviet republic of Armenia, in the Caucasus
    mountains, was left impoverished after a war with neighboring
    Azerbaijan in the early 1990s. It is heavily reliant on aid from the
    West, which has taken a skeptical view of Kocharyan's rule.
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