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  • Glendale: Violence in Armenia hits home

    Glendale News Press, CA
    March 8 2008


    Violence in Armenia hits home

    Glendale residents are left wondering whether loved ones are alive
    amid unrest in nation's capital.

    By Ryan Vaillancourt

    GLENDALE - Ongoing post-election strife in the Republic of Armenia
    has rocked some Glendale immigrants who fear they have loved ones
    among the dead and imprisoned.

    Government authorities reportedly clashed on March 1 with thousands
    of demonstrators who had been camped out for days in downtown Yerevan
    in protest of the Feb. 19 election, which they allege was rigged in
    favor of Prime Minister and President-Elect Serge Sarkissian.

    The clashes have reportedly claimed eight lives, including one police
    officer, and Glendale resident Alvard Margaryan believes her second
    cousin Armen Isakhanyan, 24, is among a number of unconfirmed deaths.

    Isakhanyan and his father had been camping out in an area known as
    Freedom Square for seven days when tension between civilians and
    authorities turned violent on March 1, Margaryan said. The pair were
    separated, but other demonstrators who had been with Isakhanyan later
    found the father and reported that his son had been shot and taken
    away by authorities while still bleeding, she said.

    Family members have since failed to determine Isakhanyan's condition
    or whereabouts, but they fear the worst. advertisement


    `The family is in mourning, and they have been to all the hospitals
    and they couldn't find him anywhere, and the only presumption is that
    he's dead,' said Margaryan, who struggled to hold back tears. `And
    they still haven't identified his body.'

    Rouben, a Glendale man who declined to give his last name for
    security reasons, is similarly on edge.

    A Glendale resident for seven years, Rouben keeps in close contact
    with his brother Levon, who remains in their native Armenia.

    But that contact has ceased since Sunday when Levon was allegedly
    apprehended by `men in uniform,' Rouben said. Family and friends
    believe he was apprehended as punishment for supporting the political
    forces that oppose the current regime.

    Since the news of his brother's abduction, Rouben has been repeatedly
    calling friends and family in Yerevan for updates, but to no avail,
    he said.

    `I'm very nervous at the moment, very anxious,' he said through a
    translator. `I'm calling every hour to find out if there's any
    update, and I'm very distressed not only about my brother, but about
    the country.'

    President Robert Kocharian instituted a 20-day state of emergency on
    March 1, a move that some say allows the regime to crack down on the
    press and keep protesters off the streets.

    Thousands of Armenian immigrants marched the streets of Hollywood on
    Sunday in solidarity with those who have denounced the election and
    continue to demand a reassessment of the voting process, said Harry
    Sarafian, co-chair of the Glendale-based Coalition for a Democratic
    Armenia.

    The coalition plans to send a petition to the U.S. State Department
    calling on the United States to urge Kocharian to lift the state of
    emergency, pull armed forces off the streets, end political
    persecution of demonstrators and annul the election results, Sarafian
    said. The petition has 10,000 signatures so far, he said.

    While many opposition supporters insist that candidate and former
    President Levon Ter-Petrossian was the true victor, voting
    irregularities reported by international observers don't point to a
    clear winner, said Levon Marashlian, an Armenian historian and
    professor at Glendale Community College.

    `I believe that there were a certain degree of violations or
    irregularities, but the question is, was it enough?' Marashlian
    asked. `How bad was it? I'm unhappy with the election process too,
    but at the same time, the opposition is convinced that they won. That
    would have to be confirmed.'

    And as long as the current regime tries to cement the election
    results, opposition forces will continue to press for another vote,
    Margaryan said.

    `Justice can be wounded,' she said. `But it cannot be killed.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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