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  • More Ter-Petrosian Supporters Arrested

    MORE TER-PETROSIAN SUPPORTERS ARRESTED

    Radio Liberty
    March 12 2008
    Czech Rep.

    The Armenian government's unprecedented crackdown on the opposition
    continued unabated on Wednesday, with law-enforcement bodies arresting
    12 more supporters of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian and
    searching the offices of a major opposition party.

    The arrests raised to at least 96 the total number of opposition
    leaders and activists jailed since last month's disputed presidential
    election. According to the Office of the Prosecutor-General, 90
    of them have been formally charged with plotting a coup d'etat,
    organizing and participating in "mass riots," assaulting security
    officers and other grave crimes.

    The accusations mainly stem from the March 1 violent confrontation in
    Yerevan between riot police and thousands of opposition protesters
    demanding a re-run of what they see as a rigged election. Senior
    prosecutors insisted on Wednesday that the clashes, which left at
    least eight people dead, were part of Ter-Petrosian's plot to return
    to power by "destabilizing the situation in the country." But they
    would not say whether the opposition leader too will be arrested and
    prosecuted on relevant charges.

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, the official election winner, did
    not rule out such possibility as he meet with university students in
    Yerevan. "Levon Ter-Petrosian's fate will be primarily decided by the
    people, not now, because in addition to legal responsibility there is
    also moral responsibility, there is also historical responsibility,"
    he said.

    "Talk of Levon Ter-Petrosian to be arrested today or tomorrow is not
    true. Neither are the claims that nobody will dare to arrest Levon
    Ter-Petrosian," added Sarkisian.

    Outgoing President Robert Kocharian was also vague on the matter,
    stressing the need to punish "all those who created this situation."

    "If we don't do that, these provocative actions will continue. There
    are people who regard Armenia's weakness and instability as beneficial
    for their political interests," he said without naming anyone.

    Most of the detainees are senior members of opposition parties who ran
    Ter-Petrosian's national and local election campaign offices. One of
    them, Ararat Zurabian, is the chairman of the Armenian Pan-National
    Movement (HHSh), the country's former ruling party of which the
    ex-president remains a member. Most members of the HHSh's governing
    board are also under arrest. The party's largely deserted headquarters
    was being searched by officers of the National Security Service
    late Wednesday.

    Ter-Petrosian on Tuesday condemned the charges brought against his
    loyalists as politically motivated and said the "political repressions"
    unleashed by the ruling regime will further heighten post-election
    tensions in Armenia. He also reiterated his claims that the authorities
    themselves orchestrated the March 1 violence to crush his campaign
    for the holding of a repeat presidential election.

    But Hakob Gharakhanian, a senior prosecutor involved in the ongoing
    criminal investigation, denied any political motives behind the
    crackdown. He claimed that some of the demonstrators who barricaded
    themselves outside the Yerevan mayor's office opened fired at and
    wounded several dozen police and interior troops in accordance with
    Ter-Petrosian's alleged coup plan.

    Journalists at the scene, including an RFE/RL correspondent, did not
    witness any opposition supporters carrying firearms both during and
    after their fierce pitched battles with security forces. The latter
    fled the scene shortly after failing to disperse the crowd with
    truncheons, water cannons, tear gas and tracer bullets.

    The law-enforcement authorities insist that they fired live rounds only
    into the air. But they have yet to explain just how at least seven of
    the protesters were shot dead during the clashes. An interior troop
    officer was also killed in still unclear circumstances.

    Gharakhanian questioned the authenticity of a video clip of the
    violence circulating on the Internet which shows a group of special
    police officers opening automatic gunfire in the direction of
    the demonstrators. Nonetheless, he said, Prosecutor-General Aghvan
    Hovsepian has instructed his subordinates to examine the footage and
    determine whether the police indeed shot at the crowd.

    "Nobody fired live rounds at the demonstrators," Gharakhanian told
    reporters. "Despite that, the prosecutor-general has issued a written
    order to investigate and give legal assessment to the actions of
    police officers."

    Underscoring their distrust of the Armenian security apparatus, the
    European Union and some international human rights organizations have
    called for an independent investigation into the deadliest street
    violence in Armenia's history.

    The Armenian government is unlikely to agree to such an
    investigation. Hovsepian, according to his spokeswoman Sona Truzian,
    told the head of the OSCE office in Yerevan late Tuesday that he is
    only ready to let "international experts" take part in forensic tests
    conducted by the investigators.
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