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  • Russia, Armenia In Joint Bid To Stave Off Another Ex-Soviet Revoluti

    RUSSIA, ARMENIA IN JOINT BID TO STAVE OFF ANOTHER EX-SOVIET REVOLUTION
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    The Jamestown Foundation
    Oct 17 2005

    The leaderships of Russia and Armenia have underscored their persisting
    concerns about the spread of anti-government uprisings across the
    former Soviet Union by holding a joint exercise of their special police
    forces. The extraordinary move comes less than two months before a
    tense constitutional referendum in Armenia that opposition groups will
    likely use for another attempt to topple President Robert Kocharian.

    The Armenian opposition, buoyed by the spectacular success of the
    revolution in Georgia, already tried to do that in the spring of
    2004. But its three-month campaign of nationwide street protests
    fizzled out due to a lack of popular support and unprecedented
    repression unleashed by Kocharian's regime.

    The police exercises took place near the southern Russian city of
    Krasnodar from September 24 through October 12. As many as 1,500
    officers (the bulk of them presumably Russians) reportedly practiced
    quelling an anti-government demonstration in the presence of top
    law-enforcement officials from the two states, including Russian
    Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliev and the chief of Armenia's Police
    Service, Hayk Haruitunian. The final and most important episode of the
    exercises involved about 50 imaginary protesters seizing a government
    building and taking hostages after demanding payment of their back
    wages and the authorities' resignation. Special police then burst
    into the building and liberated the "hostages."

    According to Armenian press reports, participants in the exercises
    simulated several violent methods of crowd dispersal dating back
    to Soviet times. PanArmenian.net, a pro-government online news
    service, reported that they also tested their shooting skills and
    familiarized themselves with "rules for the use of firearms" and
    "technical equipment" against those who challenge the authorities in
    Moscow and Yerevan. "Russian and Armenian special forces are ready
    to fulfill the tasks they are set," Nurgaliev declared afterwards.

    The presence of Russia's and Armenia's top policemen at the
    drills attests to the great importance attached to them by the
    two governments. They both have watched with alarm the wave of
    ex-Soviet revolutions that set precedents for regime change through
    the expression of popular will. Armenia is widely regarded as one of
    the potential venues for the next such revolution, a prospect that
    sets pulses racing in Moscow, Yerevan, and a number of other former
    Soviet capitals.

    "The Russian authorities have been having nervous breakdowns because
    of the revolutions that took place in post-Soviet countries," the
    Yerevan daily Haykakan Zhamanak commented on October 12. "They are
    holding joint exercises with Armenian special forces because there
    has already been an attempt at revolution in Armenia and Russia fears
    that it could be repeated."

    Apart from helping their Armenian counterparts, Russian security forces
    also have something to learn from them. On the night of April 12-13,
    2004, Armenian special police backed by interior troops brutally
    broke up a peaceful demonstration near the presidential palace in
    Yerevan that marked the climax of the last opposition offensive
    against Kocharian. Scores of protesters were beaten up and arrested
    by security forces armed with truncheons, stun grenades, and even
    electric-shock equipment. "The excessive use of police force" was
    strongly condemned at the time by Human Rights Watch.

    The obvious purpose of the government-sanctioned violence was not
    only to disperse the crowd of less than 3,000 people but also to
    discourage as many Armenians as possible from attending further
    anti-Kocharian rallies. Security forces also severely beat up
    virtually all photojournalists that were present at the scene. One
    of those journalists, who required hospitalization, insists that
    Hovannes Varian, a police general who led the operation, personally
    confiscated his camera before ordering subordinates to attack him.

    Incidentally, Varian was among the Armenian law-enforcement officials
    who monitored the Krasnodar exercises. Also in attendance was Ashot
    Gizirian, the equally notorious head of a feared police unit that
    is supposed to combat organized crime and terrorism, rather than
    opposition activity.

    The brutish police chiefs may again be called into action next month.

    Armenians will go to the polls on November 27 to vote on a package
    of constitutional amendments drafted by Kocharian and his governing
    coalition. The draft amendments, endorsed by Europe and the United
    States, are aimed at curtailing the sweeping constitutional powers
    enjoyed by the Armenian president. But Armenia's main opposition
    forces dismiss the proposed changes as cosmetic and have pledged to
    scuttle their passage. Opposition leaders have repeatedly pledged to
    turn the referendum into a vote of no confidence in Kocharian.

    "November 27 will be our day," the most radical of them, Aram
    Sarkisian, said in a recent newspaper interview.

    With the Armenian public remaining apathetic about constitutional
    reform, the ruling regime is widely expected to at least try to
    falsify the referendum results. However, the kind of crude vote
    rigging to which the authorities resorted in the last presidential and
    parliamentary elections could give the opposition a powerful weapon
    to spark a mass pro-democracy movement. Kocharian and his entourage
    cannot fail to understand this. The Krasnodar exercises illustrate
    the extent of their worries.

    Aravot, another paper critical of the Armenian leadership, reported on
    October 12 that the Armenian police are holding negotiations with the
    Interior Ministry of Belarus over the purchase of anti-riot equipment
    such as clubs, tear gas, razor wire, and even rubber bullets.

    (Haykakan Zhamanak, October 12; Aravot, October 12;
    www.PanArmenian.net, October 11; Human Rights Watch statement, April
    17, 2004)
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