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HRW: Armenia: Police Beat Peaceful Protesters in Yerevan

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  • HRW: Armenia: Police Beat Peaceful Protesters in Yerevan

    For Immediate Release
    http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/02/arm eni18189.htm


    Armenia: Police Beat Peaceful Protesters in Yerevan

    State of Emergency Restricts Civil Liberties and Free Press


    (New York, March 2, 2008) - Armenian police on March 1 used excessive
    force and violence to disperse demonstrators protesting peacefully
    against recent election results, Human Rights Watch said today.
    Following the crackdown on demonstrators, President Robert Kocharian
    decreed a state of emergency in Yerevan, the capital, until March 20,
    2008. There was a heavy police presence overnight in central Yerevan.

    According to Arminfo news agency, the police have surrounded and sealed
    off the opposition news agency A1+, preventing its employees from
    entering or leaving the building.

    "The Armenian government should refrain from using violence and make
    clear that it won't tolerate excessive use of force by police," said
    Holly Cartner, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch.
    "A political crisis doesn't give the government carte blanche in how it
    responds to demonstrators."

    Several witnesses told Human Rights Watch that at 6.30 a.m. on March 1,
    Armenian special police forces violently dispersed a rally protesting
    against alleged electoral fraud that had entered its 11th day on
    Yerevan's Freedom Square, beating demonstrators with truncheons and iron
    bars. Some were fleeing when police attacked them. Dozens are reported
    to have sustained severe injuries and more than 100 protestors were
    arrested. Armenia's first president Levon Ter-Petrosian, who was the
    main opposition challenger in last month's presidential poll, remains
    under effective house arrest as police cordoned off his home. Also on
    March 1, at least six opposition leaders were detained for organizing
    illegal demonstrations.

    Kocharian's press office reported that under the state of emergency
    public gatherings and strikes will be banned and freedom of movement as
    well as non-government public broadcasts will be severely curtailed.
    Internet and satellite reception has been cut in Yerevan.

    Later in the morning, protesters gathered in front of the French Embassy
    in downtown Yerevan. Their numbers grew substantially during the day, as
    did the police presence. A demonstrator told Human Rights Watch that
    police were equipped with rubber truncheons, electric-shock devices, and
    water cannons. The rally was still continuing in front of the embassy
    when the state of emergency was announced after police were reported by
    news organizations to have fired in the air to disperse the
    demonstrators.

    Opposition demonstrations followed the February 19 presidential
    election, after the Central Election Commission declared Prime Minister,
    Serzh Sargsian the winner with 53 percent of the vote. According to
    official tallies, opposition challenger Ter-Petrosian won 21.5 percent
    of the vote. Tens of thousands of Ter-Petrosian supporters took to the
    streets in downtown Yerevan on February 20 to protest the declared
    election results and what they believed to have been electoral fraud
    (http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/02/21/arme ni18128.htm). The protests
    continued peacefully on Freedom Square for the next 10 days, with some
    demonstrators camping out on the square in tents.

    The mayor of Yerevan previously called on the opposition to end the
    rally on Freedom Square, as the demonstrators had no permit. The Yerevan
    mayor's office issued a statement on February 25 saying the protests
    were unauthorized and urging demonstrators to call a halt to them. Two
    days later the Armenian police issued a statement urging an end to the
    demonstrations.

    At about 6:30 a.m. on March 1, a few hundred opposition supporters were
    in their tents when police arrived and started to disperse them.
    Information about approaching interior troops began to reach
    demonstrators shortly after 6:00 a.m. A 30-year-old eyewitness, who
    requested anonymity for fear of retribution, told Human Rights Watch
    that several rows of Special Forces in riot armor, with helmets, plastic
    shields and rubber truncheons, started approaching from the left and
    right sides of Freedom Square. The witness said that police, without
    prior warning, sprayed water and descended on the demonstrators, using
    rubber truncheons and electric prods.

    "People started running towards Northern Avenue, but were chased by the
    police," the witness told Human Rights Watch.

    The witness was among those who fled, running together with his father
    and younger brother, but police caught him from behind and beat him on
    his back and head with a rubber truncheon.

    "I momentarily lost consciousness after a blow on the head, and fell,"
    he told Human Rights Watch. "When I came to my senses, my brother was
    carrying me away from the square. My head was bleeding and my hat was
    all covered in blood."

    The witness required seven stitches on the right side of his forehead.
    He sustained bruises to his right hand, back and legs. Fearing arrest he
    refrained from going to a hospital and sought medical assistance from a
    private doctor. His father and brother also sustained cuts and bruises
    on their backs and heads, but did not require urgent medical assistance.

    An Armenian human rights advocate told Human Rights Watch of several
    similar descriptions of the police action given to her by other
    witnesses.

    The police operation lasted for about 15 to 20 minutes, but as news
    about it spread, more people started heading towards the square. At
    least two eyewitnesses described separately to Human Rights Watch how
    police attacked, beat, and detained groups of 20 to 30 people who
    attempted to gather near the square.

    A member of parliament from the opposition Heritage Party, Zaruhi
    Postanjian, told Human Rights Watch that she arrived at the Yerevan
    Central Police Station around 9:00 a.m. to see police cars bringing
    detainees to the station, transferring them to other vehicles, and
    taking them to different locations. She stayed there for an hour and
    counted at least 100 detainees. According to Postanjian, two ambulances
    were also parked in front of the station and in one of them she saw a
    young man who appeared unconscious and had blood stains on his face and
    body. She also described a child she believed to be between 10 and 12
    years old, bearing clear marks from beatings. Human Rights Watch could
    not confirm the nature or cause of their injuries.

    According to Avetik Ishkhanian of Armenia's Helsinki Committee, police
    arrested several opposition leaders, including Aram Manukian, Alexander
    Arzumanian, Hrant Bagratian, Vahagn Haiotsian, and Vahagn Khachatrian,
    charging them with the criminal offence of organizing an unsanctioned
    public rally. According to the opposition news website Lragir, Aram
    Manukian and Hrant Bagratian were released later during the day.

    Postanjian told Human Rights Watch that in one case a journalist, Gagig
    Shanshan, was arrested and held in Zeitun district police station in
    Yerevan, but several hours after his arrest his lawyer still had no
    access to him.

    "Even in a state of emergency, those in detention and facing criminal
    charges are entitled to due process rights, and should have access to a
    lawyer," said Cartner.

    Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
    and Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights, to which
    Armenia is a party, set out the safeguards which should accompany those
    deprived of their liberty, and access to a lawyer is one of those
    safeguards.

    Government information sources showed police footage of arms stockpiles
    that allegedly were discovered at Freedom Square after the demonstration
    was dispersed, including truncheons, guns, grenades, and gas capsules.
    The report was vehemently denied by the opposition.

    "The Armenian government prides itself on having a democratic image,"
    said Cartner. "Beating peaceful demonstrators is inconsistent with that
    image and violates its obligations under human rights law."

    To read Human Rights Watch's news release on election-related violence
    in Armenia, please visit:

    http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/02/21/arm eni18128.htm



    For more information, please contact:

    In Tblisi, Giorgi Gogia (Georgian, Russian, English): +995-77-42-12-35
    (mobile);

    In New York, Rachel Denber (English, Russian, French): +1-212-216-1266;
    or +1-917-916-1266 (mobile)
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