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HRW: Civilians Die as Police Suppress Demonstrations and Riots

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  • HRW: Civilians Die as Police Suppress Demonstrations and Riots

    For Immediate Release
    http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/02/arm eni18190.htm


    Armenia: Civilians Die as Police Suppress Demonstrations and Riots

    Authorities Should Swiftly Investigate Use of Lethal Force


    (New York, March 2, 2008) - The Armenian government should launch a
    prompt and independent investigation into the use of lethal force by
    security forces to quell demonstrations and rioting overnight on March
    1, 2008, Human Rights Watch said today. The violence occurred after a
    20-day state of emergency was declared by President Robert Kocharian in
    response to an alleged threat to public order posed by opposition
    demonstrators.

    Clashes between police and demonstrators in downtown Yerevan, the
    capital, on the night of March 1-2 resulted in at least eight deaths,
    according to the Armenian Health Ministry. Military forces deployed in
    Yerevan helped suppress the protests and riots. The ministry also
    reported that at least 131 people - including 57 police - were injured,
    some of them seriously. Many demonstrators have been reported missing,
    according to journalists and other observers in Yerevan.

    "The Armenian government should swiftly investigate whether the police
    and army used lethal force against protesters in accordance with
    international standards," said Holly Cartner, Europe and Central Asia
    director at Human Rights Watch. "While the government has a duty to
    maintain civic order, lethal force may only be used when strictly
    necessary to protect life."

    The protests began when tens of thousands of supporters of opposition
    presidential candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian took to the streets in
    downtown Yerevan on February 20 to denounce the declared election
    results and what they alleged to have been electoral fraud (
    http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/02/21/armeni181 28.htm
    <http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/02/21/ armeni18128.htm> ). The protests
    continued peacefully on Freedom Square for the next 10 days, with some
    demonstrators camping out on the square in tents. Early in the morning
    on March 1, Armenian security violently dispersed the crowd.

    Several demonstrators and eyewitnesses told Human Rights Watch that
    violent clashes started late in the afternoon of March 1, after
    demonstrators refused to abide by police instructions to disperse.
    Police then shot tracer bullets, allegedly resulting in the first
    casualties, including the death of a demonstrator.

    Later in the morning of March 1, protesters gathered in front of the
    French Embassy in downtown Yerevan. Their numbers grew substantially
    during the day, as did the police presence. Observers reported that
    police were equipped with rubber truncheons, electric-shock devices, and
    water cannons, and that military personnel arrived in armored personnel
    carriers. Several journalists present told Human Rights Watch that angry
    masses of people prepared for a confrontation with the security forces
    by arming themselves with stones, wooden sticks, and iron bars. Another
    demonstrator explained that people used nearby park benches and fences
    to find metal and wooden objects.

    By about 5 or 6 p.m., tens of thousands of people had gathered near the
    French Embassy. A demonstrator told Human Rights Watch that the crowd
    wanted to march towards the home of Ter-Petrosian, who has been under
    effective house arrest since police had cordoned off his home.
    Demonstrators made a cordon around the rally area using cars and buses.

    Violent clashes broke out, according to eyewitnesses, when a tracer
    bullet apparently struck and killed a demonstrator. Angry demonstrators
    cried for revenge and attacked the security forces. A local observer who
    watched a video recording of the events told Human Rights Watch that the
    video showed how demonstrators, demanding revenge, placed the dead body
    of a man, apparently in his 50s, on top of a car. Eyewitnesses reported
    that demonstrators then attacked police, who retreated. One protestor
    told Human Rights Watch how a group of young demonstrators chased
    police, set fire to police cars, and broke shop windows.

    Persons in the vicinity told Human Rights Watch that they heard weapons
    being fired. A local source who watched video footage of the aftermath
    of some of the clashes told Human Rights Watch: "I saw thick layers of
    blood, parts of human bodies, several dead bodies... at least eight
    police cars were on fire... a lot of wounded, who cried for help and
    water, a lot of people with open head wounds, claiming that they had
    been assaulted by police... I saw also wounded police, a lot of blood,
    pools of blood."

    "Police and security forces clearly faced an extremely difficult
    situation," said Cartner. "But they are still obliged to adhere to
    standards for the use of lethal force."

    The United Nations Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by
    Law Enforcement Officials call upon law enforcement officials in the
    dispersal of violent assemblies to use firearms only when less dangerous
    means are not practicable and only to the minimum extent necessary.
    Lethal force may only be used when strictly unavoidable to protect life
    and only when less extreme means are insufficient to achieve these
    objectives.

    Human Rights Watch is deeply concerned by reports from journalists and
    local observers that many demonstrators have gone missing. In the
    current state of emergency, with an effective media blackout, relatives
    have little access to information about their missing family members.

    "Armenian authorities should promptly make the casualty list public, as
    well as the names of those arrested and places of detention," said
    Cartner. "The authorities should also not use the state of emergency to
    unnecessarily restrict freedom of information."

    Under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR),
    to which Armenia is a party, governments may limit certain ICCPR rights
    only during a state of emergency that is declared during a "public
    emergency which threatens the life of the nation." Limits on rights and
    freedoms may only be to the extent strictly required by the situation.
    Governments must at all times guarantee the right to life, the
    prohibition against torture and ill-treatment, the right to liberty and
    security of person, the right to a fair trial, and freedom of thought,
    conscience and religion, among other rights. The European Convention on
    Human Rights provides similar protections.
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