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Kocharian Rules Out Early End To Emergency Rule

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  • Kocharian Rules Out Early End To Emergency Rule

    KOCHARIAN RULES OUT EARLY END TO EMERGENCY RULE

    Radio Liberty
    March 5 2008
    Czech Republic

    President Robert Kocharian dismissed calls for an early end to
    the state of emergency in Yerevan and threatened to imprison his
    predecessor and arch-foe Levon Ter-Petrosian on Wednesday as his
    security bodies widened the post-election crackdown on the Armenian
    opposition.

    The Armenian government is facing growing international pressure to
    lift the 20-day emergency rule which Kocharian declared on Saturday
    night following bloody clashes between riot police and Ter-Petrosian
    supporters. An envoy from the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    said Tuesday that its lifting is a necessary condition for solving
    the country's most serious political crisis in nearly a decade.

    "I do not see any reason for the shortening or for the extension of
    the state of emergency," Kocharian told a news conference . He made
    it clear that the authorities will not hesitate to break up more
    Ter-Petrosian rallies even after March 20.

    According to the Office of the Prosecutor-General, 53 supporters of
    Ter-Petrosian, among them two parliament deputies, have been arrested
    in the aftermath of Armenia's disputed presidential election. A
    spokeswoman for the office, Sona Truzian, told RFE/RL that 26 of them
    have already been formally charged with instigating and participating
    in "mass disorders" and attempting to forcibly seize power. The charges
    mainly stem from Saturday's clashes in Yerevan between protesters
    and security forces that left at least eight people dead.

    Truzian said law-enforcement authorities are also hunting for "many"
    other Ter-Petrosian loyalists. She refused to identify any of them,
    citing "the interests of the investigation." Two of the fugitives
    are also members of the parliament.

    Kocharian said the authorities would commit a "big injustice" if
    they jailed only ordinary participants of the March 1 clashes. He
    stressed the importance of prosecuting all "organizers" of what his
    administration calls an opposition attempt at coup d'etat.

    Kocharian added that many in Armenia believe Ter-Petrosian should
    also be punished for the opposition actions. "Imagine a situation
    where I try to return to power five years later in the same fashion,"
    the outgoing president said. "Such methods and precedents must be
    ruled out. Everyone must be punished in accordance with law."

    Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian likewise declined to rule out
    the possibility of Ter-Petrosian's arrest on Tuesday.

    Ter-Petrosian has said that the protest would not have been marred
    by bloodshed had the authorities lifted his de facto house arrest
    and allowed him to join the crowd. He said hours before the outbreak
    of violence he offered the authorities to let the crowd of tens of
    thousands of his angry supporters, who gathered outside the Yerevan
    municipality, march through the city center and then disperse.

    "Imagine what would have happened to our city had we let that
    uncontrollable crowd into central streets," responded Kocharian. He
    said he offered Ter-Petrosian to rally his supporters outside the
    city center but that the latter refused.

    Meanwhile, Ter-Petrosian associates not arrested so far told RFE/RL
    on Wednesday that they are undaunted by the intensifying government
    crackdown. "The authorities are showing that violence repression
    is their only language of communication with the opposition and
    the people," said Levon Zurabian, the ex-president's former press
    secretary. "This is a very counterproductive approach."

    "The most prudent and clever thing the authorities could have done
    today is to begin a dialogue with leaders representing the people.

    But they are rejecting dialogue," he added.

    "If the authorities hope that the process is over, they are mistaken,"
    said Lyudmila Sargsian of the opposition Social Democratic Hnchakian
    Party. "The violence which they perpetrated and are now blaming on
    the opposition is convincing every citizen that these authorities
    are leading this country to ruin."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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