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ANKARA: Armenian Opposition Ends Protest After State Of Emergency De

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Opposition Ends Protest After State Of Emergency De

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION ENDS PROTEST AFTER STATE OF EMERGENCY DECLARED

    Hurriyet
    March 2 2008
    Turkey

    Armenia's opposition ended a standoff with riot police in the capital
    Yerevan on Sunday after the government declared a state of emergency
    and mobilised the army in response to the worst unrest in a decade,
    Reuters reported. Violent clashes killed 8 protesters and left 33
    police injured.

    Authorities imposed a state of emergency late Saturday following
    clashes between riot police and protesters that also left 33 police
    injured. A spokeswoman for the foreign ministry told AFP, seven
    civilians and one police officer had been killed. One police officer
    was in critical condition and 17 had been hospitalised for gunshot
    wounds, she said.

    "The police are calling on all citizens to be careful, to hold
    back and to obey all the rules of the state of emergency," a police
    statement read. A dozen armoured personnel carriers and about 100
    soldiers stood guard outside the main government building and foreign
    ministry. Several tanks could be seen at the scene of the nighttime
    clashes.

    The last protestors dispersed during the night, but burnt-out cars,
    stones and poles still littered the streets. The city was calm Sunday
    and shops and cafes around Yerevan were open as residents walked and
    examined the damage done overnight.

    The state of emergency will be in effect in the capital until March
    20 under a decree signed by President Robert Kocharian. The state of
    emergency bans public demonstrations and requires the media to only
    publish or broadcast information from government sources. Armenias
    National Assembly voted overnight to support the measure and called
    in a decree for "wisdom and restraint... so that life in the country
    can return quickly to normal."

    The violence began early Saturday when riot police cleared a
    central square where protestors had been camped since a February 19
    presidential election won by Kocharians ally, Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian. The runner-up, opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian,
    said he had been placed under house arrest, although the government
    denied this. Between 6,000 and 8,000 demonstrators quickly regrouped
    in another square. When police tried to disperse them after nightfall
    the protestors fought back with petrol bombs, sticks and stones.

    Police used tear gas and fired live ammunition into the air.

    Protestors finally left the streets after an appeal by their leaders.

    A police spokesman said eight police officers had suffered gunshot
    wounds during the unrest and that several were in a serious
    condition. Several protesters could be seen with head injuries and
    burns, but there was no official information on casualties among
    the demonstrators.

    Ter-Petrosians spokesman blamed authorities for the unrest. "The
    authorities are entirely responsible for these clashes," spokesman
    Arman Musinian said. "We said that for the situation to be resolved
    peacefully it was necessary for Levon Ter-Petrosian to be able to
    speak with his supporters."

    The protesters had massed in Yerevan Saturday for an 11th consecutive
    day protesting alleged rigging of the presidential vote -- which
    Europes main election monitoring organisation said "mostly" met
    international standards.

    In a statement Saturday, the current chairman of the Organisation for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Finnish Foreign Minister
    Ilkka Kanerva, condemned the use of force against demonstrators.

    Official results gave 52.9 percent of the vote to Sarkisian and 21.5
    percent to Ter-Petrosian.
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