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Calm Urged Amid Armenia Election Clashes

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  • Calm Urged Amid Armenia Election Clashes

    CALM URGED AMID ARMENIA ELECTION CLASHES

    CNN International
    March 2 2008

    (CNN) -- Armenian opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian appealed to
    his followers to go home Sunday to avoid the kind of violent clashes
    between police and protesters that left nine people dead over the
    weekend.

    Opposition supporters wave an Armenian flag during a protest rally
    in Yerevan on Saturday.

    Ter-Petrosian vowed he would continue to protest the election results
    peacefully through legal means.

    Aides drove through the capital city of Yerevan playing the appeal over
    loudspeakers and by Sunday, few demonstrators remained on the streets.

    Chaos in the former Soviet republic could affect the stability of the
    region, which plays an important role in producing and supplying oil
    and gas to the West. Armenia, population 3 million, lies a east of
    Turkey, south of Georgia and north of Iran.

    "We will avoid any public meeting and marches, and we will concentrate
    on the constitutional court where we are expecting the case to be heard
    and discussed (Tuesday)," opposition spokesman Arman Musinyan told CNN
    Sunday. Watch a report on clashes between police and the opposition "

    The clashes Saturday over alleged election fraud killed at least
    nine people and injured 17 police officers, a government official
    told CNN Sunday.

    Among the dead was one police officer and eight civilians, the official
    said. Sixteen officers were hospitalized with bullet wounds.

    A 17th officer was in critical condition.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian declared a state of emergency
    Saturday night that he hoped would bring order to Yerevan. The state
    of emergency could last until March 20, officials said. Watch Ghazarian
    discuss the situation in Armenia "

    The clashes began when authorities used force to clear Freedom Square
    of thousands of demonstrators who had camped there for the past 10
    days, according to a U.S. Embassy official.

    The embassy official estimated that the demonstrations in Freedom
    Square grew to as many as 60,000 Armenians at times over the last
    10 days.

    "This government tried to do everything to stop our people from
    peacefully protesting," Musinyan said. "For nine days, no car was
    burned, no window was broken, nothing. They just saw that people
    will not go for any provocation. That's why they tried to forcefully
    disperse them."

    Armenian police said they moved in Saturday morning because they had
    information some demonstrators were armed with weapons and explosives.

    The protests began soon after the Feb. 19 presidential election, when
    Ter-Petrosian lost to Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, the handpicked
    successor of the outgoing president.

    The opposition party immediately accused the government of vote fraud
    and demanded that the results be voided.

    The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE)
    monitored the election and concluded that it was mostly in line with
    international standards, although it did include some criticism in
    its report.
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