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Armenia: Yerevan Braces For Presidential Inauguration, Protests

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  • Armenia: Yerevan Braces For Presidential Inauguration, Protests

    ARMENIA: YEREVAN BRACES FOR PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION, PROTESTS
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    April 4 2008
    NY

    With less than a week to go before Armenia's presidential inauguration,
    attention is riveted on whether a new administration will be able to
    foster a truce in the ongoing political battle between the country's
    opposition and government.

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian is due to be sworn in as Armenia's next
    chief executive on April 9 inside Yerevan's Opera House, adjacent
    to Freedom Square, the central staging point for past opposition
    demonstrations. The square remains under tight police control following
    clashes with protestors on March 1. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    While authorities are busy preparing for the inauguration ceremony,
    opposition representatives from about two dozen political parties
    and other organizations -- those supporting Levon Ter-Petrosian, the
    second-place finisher in the bitterly disputed presidential election
    in February -- are looking for new ways to make their dissenting
    voices heard.

    On inauguration day itself, the opposition is preparing a public
    rally and a mourning march to commemorate the victims of the March
    1 violence. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. "On
    April 9, all the Armenian people will commemorate those who died for
    their freedom, marking it as a day of mourning and resistance, wearing
    black and with other symbols and ceremonies of mourning," announced
    a statement from National Awakening, a union of non-governmental
    organizations supporting the opposition.

    While National Awakening pledges that the inauguration day protest
    will demonstrate voters' resolve to "recover" the "victory that
    was temporarily taken from them," some analysts question how ready
    the opposition actually is to launch a fresh campaign against the
    government. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Aside from a recent meeting with Council of Europe representatives,
    Ter-Petrosian has largely vanished from the public scene, keeping
    quiet in recent weeks. Most opposition leaders have been arrested or
    went into hiding after March 1, and subsequent amendments to the law
    on public meetings have put tough restrictions on public rallies.

    [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The amendments have done nothing to allay fears of a fresh crackdown,
    according to one pro-opposition political analyst. "In reality,
    such legislative changes banning public rallies and marches and
    other measures are designed to create an atmosphere of fear among the
    people, which is against the tenets of human rights," commented Aghasi
    Yenokian. "Creating an atmosphere of fear cannot solve any problem."

    To get around the law, other forms of protest have been found. A few
    days after the opposition's March 21 march, the first since the March
    1 crackdown, many Yerevan residents began to take part in so-called
    "popular or political walks" around town. The site for these impromptu
    strolls changed each day; other participants played chess on sidewalks,
    read books on benches or staged debates among themselves.

    Under the amendments, rallies can be banned if the police and National
    Security Service consider that they involve hate speech, agitation
    for violence, or calls to overthrow "the constitutional order" by
    force. While open-air book reading and chess playing do not fall
    under those categories, the unstructured protests still have drawn
    a police response.

    "They began to put people en masse into police cars and take them
    to police stations. Don't they have the right to walk?" commented
    Ruzan Khachatrian, a spokeswoman for the People's Party of Armenia,
    one of the parties that supported Ter-Petrosian's candidacy. "I have
    lived in the city center for more than 20 years and they [police]
    hamper my right to walk. ... I will go to court."

    Opposition journalist and publicist Tigran Paskevichian, who was
    also detained by police while on "a political stroll", says that he
    was released after spending some time in a police station answering
    questions. "I was asked what I was doing there, I said I was reading
    a book. They asked whether I couldn't find another place for reading
    a book," said Paskevichian.

    Governing Republican Party of Armenia spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov says
    that political motivations should not be sought in the application
    of the law. "There must be law and order in this country where there
    is an aspiration for democracy," Sharmazanov told the ArmeniaNow news
    website. "There is a court for complaints where rights are defended. We
    ourselves are advocates of a country where laws are respected."

    When adopting the amendments on the law on assembly, MPs included a
    special provision for it to come into effect the day after its official
    publication, rather than 10 days after that date, as is customary. A
    number of prominent local and international organizations have taken
    issue with the amendments, calling on authorities to respect the
    rights of opposition detainees. In a joint paper released April 2, the
    Council of Europe and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights criticized
    the Armenian government, saying that "they [the amendments] restrict
    further the right of assembly in a significant fashion."

    Meanwhile, a March 27 report issued by Human Rights Watch stated
    that the amendments "violate Armenia's obligation to respect peaceful
    assembly." It also noted that the changes "effectively punish peaceful
    demonstrators for the violence that took place on March 1."

    Arrests of walking protestors reportedly have decreased in the last
    four days, coinciding with a fact-finding visit by the AGO Group
    of the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers. The envoys,
    charged with monitoring Armenia's compliance with Council of Europe
    membership requirements, met both with government officials and with
    Ter-Petrosian.

    At a joint news conference on March 31 with Foreign Minister Vardan
    Oskanian, AGO Group head Per Sjogren said that the envoys advocated a
    six-point proposal to return the situation in Armenia to a "democratic
    path." The AGO Group has proposed starting a national inquiry into
    the March 1 events with involvement by foreign experts.

    Revising the amendments restricting public rallies, releasing political
    prisoners, ensuring detainees' rights to see their family and embarking
    on a "national dialogue" between opposition and the government were
    among the additional points.

    "I think that the proposals are aimed at improving the situation,"
    Oskanian said. "But only discussion will show what final results they
    will produce."

    As yet, no sign exists that such dialogue is imminent. On April 2,
    about three dozen detainees held in pre-trial detention for attempting
    to foster a revolution went on a hunger strike. Without an end to
    "the torture of innocent people" and reexamination of their cases,
    the group pledged to stage an "open-ended" hunger strike as of April
    9. One senior opposition member, Suren Sureniants of the Republic
    (Hanrapetutiun) Party, has been on a hunger strike since March 24,
    but is reported to be in stable health.

    At his press conference, the Council of Europe's Sjogren told
    journalists that he had "received a positive answer" when he
    asked about the release of prisoners "kept in custody for political
    activities." Said Sjogren: "The answer implies that this problem will
    get a solution."

    After his inauguration, Sarkisian will come under pressure to restore
    a sense of political equilibrium in Yerevan. If reconciliation efforts
    stall, Armenia could suffer some serious financial consequences. In
    a March 11 letter, the head of the US-funded Millennium Challenge
    Corporation warned outgoing President Robert Kocharian that "recent
    events could have negative effects on Armenia's eligibility for
    MCC funding." The country is scheduled to receive $235.6 million in
    assistance funds through the program

    For now, US diplomats in Yerevan seem inclined to give president-elect
    Sarkisian the benefit of the doubt. "We think it is only fair to give
    the new administration time to turn the situation around," US Charge
    d'Affairs Joseph Pennington said at a March 28 press conference. "So
    if we see those negative trends turn into a positive direction,
    obviously that will have a positive impact on the decisions of
    Millennium Challenge Corporation."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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