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PACE Monitoring Committee Urges All Armenian Political Forces TO Ref

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  • PACE Monitoring Committee Urges All Armenian Political Forces TO Ref

    PACE MONITORING COMMITTEE URGES ALL ARMENIAN POLITICAL FORCES TO REFRAIN FROM INCREASING TENSIONS

    ARKA
    March 19, 2008

    YEREVAN, March 19. /ARKA/. Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe (PACE) Monitoring Committee urges all Armenian political forces
    to accept the decision of the RA Constitutional Court recognizing the
    results of the February 19 presidential elections as valid, the PACE
    Communiqué placed in the PACE website reads. The Committee met in
    Paris on February 18 to discuss the situation in Armenia and consider
    the proposals of its envoy John Prescott.

    >From February 20 to March 1, Armenia's opposition political forces led
    by ex-president Levon Ter-Petrosyan were holding rallies in Liberty
    Square in Yerevan protesting against the results of February 19
    presidential elections attributing victory to Prime Minister Serge
    Sargssyan.

    As a result of public unrest and clashes between the rally participants
    and the police, 131 people were injured, and eight were killed. On
    March 1, RA President Robert Kocharyan issued a decree on imposing
    a twenty-day state of emergency in the capital.

    The Constitutional Court of Armenia turned down the petition of
    Armenian opposition to invalidate the voting results and left unchanged
    the February 24 decision of the RA Central Electoral Commission,
    according to which Serge Sargssyan, leader of the Republican Party
    of Armenia and prime minister is Armenia's new president elect.

    The committee was informed by its envoy John Prescott of the main
    conclusions arising from his fact-finding mission to Yerevan, on 7
    and 8 March 2008, and called upon all sides to accept Mr Prescott's
    proposals aimed at resolving the current crisis.

    The Committee demands establishing an independent inquiry into the
    circumstances that led to the events on 1 March 2008, initiating
    a dialogue between all political forces to reform the electoral
    framework with a view to regaining public trust in the conduct and
    outcome of elections, to reform the political system with a view to
    providing a proper place for the opposition in the decision-making
    process and governance of the country.

    The Monitoring Committee also expressed its deep concern about the
    arrest of more than one hundred persons in Armenia and the conditions
    in which such arrests took place. The Committee urged lifting the
    state of emergency and restoring individual Human rights and freedoms,
    as well as releasing all jailed activists who have not committed
    violent crimes.

    In the opinion of the committee, the arrest of large numbers of
    opposition leaders and of three Members of Parliament is inevitably
    perceived as a crack-down on the opposition by the authorities and
    will do nothing to ease the tensions in Armenia. The committee called
    upon all sides to refrain from any action that would increase the
    tensions and to commit themselves to a genuine dialogue to resolve
    the current crisis.

    The Monitoring Committee noted that the dialogue between all political
    forces could be initiated in the form of round tables under the aegis
    of the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly.

    --Boundary_(ID_mNHkAc+f9yPznC/o0AU6PA)- -
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