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ARMENIA: Restrictions Imposed As President Declares Emergency

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  • ARMENIA: Restrictions Imposed As President Declares Emergency

    ARMENIA: RESTRICTIONS IMPOSED AS PRESIDENT DECLARES EMERGENCY

    CPJ Press Freedom Online
    http://www.cpj.org/news/2008/europe/armenia 03mar08na.html
    March 3 2008
    NY

    New York, March 3, 2008-Armenian authorities should immediately
    lift restrictions on independent news reporting and the censorship
    of independent news Web sites, steps imposed when President Robert
    Kocharian declared a state of emergency on Saturday, the Committee
    to Protect Journalists said today.

    Kocharian declared a 20-day state of emergency after clashes between
    government troops and opposition supporters in the capital, Yereven,
    resulted in eight deaths and more than 100 injuries, according to
    international press reports. Protesters claimed that vote-rigging
    marred the February 19 presidential election that ended in victory
    for Kocharian's hand-picked successor, Serzh Sarkisian. Hundreds of
    troops were deployed in Yerevan to clamp down on the demonstrations.

    The state of emergency also banned public gatherings, set travel
    restrictions, and gave police expanded search powers, according to
    international news accounts.

    As part of the declaration, Kocharian ordered media outlets to cite
    only official sources when reporting on national politics. Several
    independent and opposition news Web sites that operate under Armenian
    domain names were also blocked today. They included Web sites run by
    the pro-opposition news agency A1+ and the independent newspapers
    Aravot (Morning) and Aikakan Zhamanak (Armenian Time), according
    to the news agency Armenia Today. Armenia Today reported that local
    Internet users received a message that said: "Warning! As ordered by
    a state decree, some informational Web sites will not be accessible."

    The Armenian Service of the U.S.-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
    (RFE/RL) was blocked within the country.

    "We're alarmed by this blatant attempt to censor news of the disputed
    election," CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon said. "We call on Armenian
    authorities to withdraw the ban on independent newsgathering and
    dissemination, and restore access to independent and opposition media."

    Sarkisian took about 53 percent of the vote on February 19, according
    to official results, and is due to take office in April. Rival
    candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian, who was Armenia's first post-Soviet
    president, contested the results and claimed the election was rigged,
    according to RFE/RL.

    The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which
    monitored the election, said the vote was mostly in conformance with
    international standards. But OSCE monitors noted flaws in vote-counting
    and said officials blurred partisan and governmental interests.

    Up to 20,000 Ter-Petrosian supporters began rallying in Yerevan on
    February 21; their skepticism about the results was fanned when two
    Central Elections Commission members and a deputy prosecutor general
    publicly questioned the fairness of the vote, RFE/RL reported.

    Authorities deployed police when Ter-Petrosian's supporters built a
    tent camp on the capital's Freedom Square and groups of protesters
    staged rallies in front of different government buildings, the news
    agency Regnum reported. The stand-off reached its peak on Saturday
    morning when police, claiming that they had received reports of alleged
    arms distribution and coup plotting, started dismantling the tents,
    according to local press reports.

    Angered protesters, in turn, attacked police with metal rods
    and Molotov cocktails, burned cars, and looted local shops,
    Reutersreported. The protests calmed when Ter-Petrosian called on
    Sunday for a halt to the violence, Regnum said.
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