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EU To Help Resolve Post-Election Crisis In Armenia

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  • EU To Help Resolve Post-Election Crisis In Armenia

    EU TO HELP RESOLVE POST-ELECTION CRISIS IN ARMENIA

    Deutsche Welle
    http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,316 3780,00.html
    March 3 2008
    Germany

    The European Union will send a mediator to Armenia to help resolve
    post-election violence that has left at least eight people dead. Two
    parliamentarians were arrested after defecting from the ruling party.

    After speaking with Armenian President Robert Kocharian on Sunday,
    March 2, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana has asked his special
    envoy for the South Caucasus, Peter Semneby, to go to Yerevan on
    his behalf.

    At least eight have died in the bloody political unrest that followed
    disputed elections in the small Caucasus republic. The EU has offered
    to mediate.

    The violence began on the weekend, when Armenian police reacted
    violently to ongoing protests in response to the presidential election
    on Feb. 19. Some 15,000 protesters took to the streets, demonstrating
    against alleged government vote-rigging.

    State-of-emergency declared

    Witnesses said that Armenian security forces used truncheons, fired
    into the air and released tear gas to disperse the protestors. Local
    media reported dozens of injured opposition supporters of failed
    presidential candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian, while the police said 33
    of its members were hurt.

    As a result, the outgoing president declared a 20-day state of
    emergency. That declaration was upheld by parliament, which is led
    by the vote winner in the election, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

    Parliamentarian Miasnik Malkhasian was arrested for "attempting to
    seize power," the press service of the Armenian police told AFP. A
    source in the security services said that Hakob Hokopian, another
    member of parliament, was arrested on the same charge.

    "This is a new step in the violence the authorities are using against
    the opposition to deprive it of its leadership," said Arman Musinian,
    a spokesman for opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    The two deputies had defected to Ter-Petrosian's camp after being
    elected as members of the ruling Republican Party.

    The state of 3.2 million has emerged as a strategically important
    region, lying along gas routes from the energy-rich Caspian Sea region
    to Europe and being a close partner of Iran.

    Western powers fear instability in the region could disrupt gas routes
    and further undermine a fragile security situation with Armenia's
    neighbors Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    Sunday's violence was the worst in Armenia's post-Soviet history,
    causing Ter-Petrosian to call for a 20-day halt to demonstrations in
    a radio address blared through loudspeakers on cars driven through
    the city center.

    Opposition claims voting violations

    Ter-Petrosian has refused to accept official results that showed him
    with 21.4 percent of the vote, far behind Prime Minister Sarkisian,
    who won just over the 50 percent needed to avoid a run-off election
    with the second-place finisher.

    The opposition has lodged an appeal with the Constitutional Court
    to invalidate the results, complaining of mass voting violations,
    including the beating and kidnapping of its supporters at the polls.

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's
    vote-monitoring arm declared the elections mostly in adherence with
    international standards.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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