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Armenia Pressures Opponents, Arrests 30 For Riots

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  • Armenia Pressures Opponents, Arrests 30 For Riots

    ARMENIA PRESSURES OPPONENTS, ARRESTS 30 FOR RIOTS
    By Hasmik Lazarian

    Reuters
    March 4 2008
    UK

    YEREVAN, March 4 (Reuters) - Armenian police have arrested 30
    opposition activists for starting a riot which killed eight people,
    the Prosecutor-General said on Tuesday, in a clampdown on opponents
    during a state of emergency.

    The ex-Soviet state's top military commander also said he needed the
    emergency laws to ensure stability but opposition leaders accused
    the authorities of abusing their powers.

    "Thirty people have been detained for provoking mass disturbances on
    March 1, not obeying the police and violent actions against policemen,"
    the Prosecutor-General's office said in a statement.

    Police had already arrested a handful of prominent opposition figures
    -- for allegedly plotting a coup or hoarding firearms -- during daily
    mass demonstrations against a Feb. 19 presidential election.

    The protesters accuse Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan of rigging an
    election last month in which he officially won 53 percent of the
    vote and his main rival, former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan, won
    21.5 percent.

    Armenia's current President and Sarksyan's ally, Robert Kocharyan,
    ordered the army onto the streets of Yerevan and imposed emergency
    laws during riots on Saturday -- the worst civil violence since
    Armenia's independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

    Now armed soldiers loiter on Yerevan's street corners and armoured
    personnel carriers stand in the main square imposing the military's
    control and ready to counter any demonstrators.

    "The situation in Yerevan is fully under control," General Seyran
    Ohanyan, the chief of Armenia's general military staff, told a news
    conference.

    "If it's needed, we'll help police to guarantee public order."

    Armenia is an ancient Christian state on the fringes of the Caucasus,
    an unstable transit route for oil between the Caspian Sea and Europe.

    Envoys from Europe, the United States and the Vatican have flown to
    Armenia since the state of emergency to talk to the government and
    opposition leaders who say the laws are an abuse of the authorities'
    powers.

    "This is a terror which goes to a different level," Arman Musinyan,
    Ter-Petrosyan's spokesman said.

    Also on Tuesday parliament discussed stripping four opposition members
    of parliament, accused of provoking violence, of their immunity from
    prosecution. (Additional reporting and writing by Margarita Antidze
    and James Kilner in Yerevan; Editing by Charles Dick)
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