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No Sign Of Negotiations In Armenia Standoff: OSCE

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  • No Sign Of Negotiations In Armenia Standoff: OSCE

    NO SIGN OF NEGOTIATIONS IN ARMENIA STANDOFF: OSCE
    By James Kilner

    Reuters
    March 3 2008
    UK

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenia's main opposition group and the government
    are unlikely to start negotiations soon to end a standoff which
    triggered rioting that killed eight people, a European envoy said on
    Monday after he met both parties.

    Soldiers patrolled Yerevan's streets after President Robert Kocharyan
    imposed emergency laws on Saturday following clashes between police and
    protesters -- the worst civil violence in Armenia since independence
    from the Soviet Union in 1991.

    The protesters accuse Kocharyan's ally and Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarksyan of rigging a presidential election last month. Opposition
    leader and former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan blamed police brutality
    for the violence.

    "In all likeliness this kind of dialogue between Ter-Petrosyan and
    the government at the moment is not possible," Heikki Talvitie,
    a special envoy for the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe (OSCE), told reporters after being asked if the two sides
    would start negotiations.

    "But let's not exclude it from the future," he added.

    Armenia is a country of around 3.2 million people on the edge of

    A U.S. State Department spokesman said Washington was sending
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matt Bryza to help "facilitate
    discussions" between the government and opposition. But he stressed
    Bryza would not carry out "formal mediation".

    "This is a situation where we need to see both the parties work with
    one another, engage in dialogue, not violence," the spokesman said.

    EMERGENCY LAWS

    Ter-Petrosyan has told his supporters not to rally during the 20-day
    emergency laws which ban meetings but he has also said he is prepared
    to continue the protests afterwards.

    "He's very determined, very charismatic," a Western diplomat said.

    "He'll find it difficult to step back from this now."

    Kocharyan and Sarksyan have presided over a period of economic growth,
    but detractors accuse their government of corruption and nepotism.

    Ter-Petrosyan was Armenia's first president after it broke away from
    the Soviet Union, and although street demonstrations forced him to
    resign in 1998 he is still loved by many who want an alternative to
    the current government.

    Witnesses saw police fire tracer rounds above the heads of protesters
    and lob tear gas into the crowd on Saturday. Protesters armed with
    metal bars and petrol bombs torched cars and looted shops.

    The emergency laws ban public meetings and restrict media reporting.

    Armoured personnel carriers were still guarding the main square on
    Monday, but traffic has returned to the streets and shops were open.

    "It was very bad on Saturday," Sahak, a 25-year-old unemployed man,
    said as he watched workers hammer together a broken metal shelf in
    a looted supermarket.

    "But we now really hope that is all over."

    Sarksyan officially won 53 percent of the vote and Ter-Petrosyan
    won 21.5 percent, in an election the OSCE described as flawed but
    sufficient for Armenia to fulfil its international obligations.

    Diplomats expect a harsher follow-up report from the OSCE this week.

    (Additional reporting by Margarita Antidze and Hasmik Lazarian;
    editing by Andrew Roche)
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