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Armenia heeds European call to ease protest curbs

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  • Armenia heeds European call to ease protest curbs

    Agence France Presse
    June 11, 2008 Wednesday 3:44 PM GMT



    Armenia heeds European call to ease protest curbs

    YEREVAN, June 11 2008


    Armenia's parliament on Wednesday approved a law easing restrictions
    on public demonstrations, meeting a demand from Europe's leading human
    rights watchdog.

    The Council of Europe had called for Armenia to loosen restrictions
    imposed after violent post-election clashes between riot police and
    opposition protesters in March that left 10 people dead.

    The revised law will allow protesters to hold spontaneous rallies
    without government permission, as long as they are limited to six
    hours.

    It also requires local authorities to prove that a potential
    demonstration creates a direct threat of violence in order to deny
    permission for it to be held and allows for judicial appeals of
    refusals for permission.

    Armenia's opposition denounced the changes as "cosmetic."

    "If local authorities want to deny permission for opposition protests,
    they can always find reasons. We see these changes as purely
    cosmetic," said Arman Musinian, a spokesman for opposition leader and
    former president Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    The violence in March broke out after police moved in to clear
    thousands of protesters who had rallied for 11 days to protest the
    victory of prime minister Serzh Sarkisian in a February 19
    presidential election.

    They alleged that the ballot had been rigged in Sarkisian's favour and
    that Ter-Petrosian was the real winner. Dozens more protesters were
    injured, many from gunshot wounds.

    A mountainous country of about three million people -- wedged between
    Iran and Turkey -- Armenia has experienced repeated political violence
    since gaining its independence with the 1991 collapse of the Soviet
    Union.
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