Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

No Reason To Lift State Of Emergency - Kocharian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • No Reason To Lift State Of Emergency - Kocharian

    NO REASONS TO LIFT STATE OF EMERGENCY - KOCHARIAN

    Interfax News Agency
    Russia & CIS
    March 5, 2008
    Russia

    The state of emergency introduced in Yerevan following mass riots in
    the city will be maintained, Armenian President Robert Kocharian said.

    "As of yet, we are not sure that such incidents will not take place
    again, and this could lead to more danger," Kocharian told journalists
    on Wednesday.

    "Firstly, one should be certain that riots will not repeat themselves
    in order to lift the state of emergency. Today, there is no such
    certainty, because the whereabouts of the organizers of the riots
    have yet to be established," the Armenian president said.

    People who used "arms and explosives against police" are still at
    large, Kocharian said.

    Yerevan's city hall should not sanction new opposition protest actions,
    the president said, adding that he advocates legal restrictions on
    rallies in downtown Yerevan. "One should introduce legal restrictions,
    for example on staging rallies on Liberty Square no more than once
    or twice a week," the president said, stressing, "We should make sure
    this situation does not happen again."

    "There should be a swift reaction on the first day. The main thing
    is to avoid a negative development of the situation; the main thing
    is that there is no psychosis," Kocharian said. "We all should learn
    a lesson from these events," he said.

    The opposition, headed by Levon Ter-Petrosian, a former Armenian
    president, launched mass protests the day after the February 19
    presidential election, demanding a revision of the results.

    Police dispersed the rally on Liberty Square on March 1. The protesters
    then moved to an area adjacent to the embassies of France and Italy,
    where up to 10,000 people rallied. Police reported that, by the
    evening, the situation had become uncontrollable and crows had started
    looting nearby government institutions and private shops, setting cars
    ablaze in the process. An end was put to the rioting after a 20-day
    state of emergency was introduced in Yerevan by a presidential decree.

    According to official data, eight people died and 131 sustained
    injuries in the rioting.

    Besides Kocharian said, that the situation at the contact line between
    the Nagorno-Karabakh and Azeri armed forces has stabilized.

    "There was an attack on a stronghold, and it was captured. A response
    came immediately, and the status quo was restored," Kocharian said
    at a press conference.

    The conflicting sides reached a ceasefire agreement, Kocharian said.

    He praised the role of OSCE chairman-in-office's representative for
    Nagorno-Karabakh Andrzej Kasprzyk in settling the incident.

    "We are capable of settling this incident," Kocharian said.

    The Armenian president suggested that Azerbaijan might have thought
    that Armenia lost its focus on Nagorno-Karabakh or that "some major
    units were withdrawn from Nagorno-Karabakh to maintain order in
    Yerevan."

    "I don't think that it would have been politically correct to take
    advantage of such a situation," he said.

    Earlier Armenian Prime Minister and President-elect Serzh Sargsyan
    said, that the Armenian army inflicted "numerous" fatalities on Azeri
    forces in a clash on Tuesday, and territory seized by the Azeris on
    Tuesday morning was returned to the Nagorno-Karabakh government.

    "There are negotiations in progress on the peaceful resolution of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," Sargsyan said.

    "I am sure that common sense will take the upper hand, and I rule
    out the military resolution of the conflict," he said.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan concluded a ceasefire in May 1994.
Working...
X