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Ter-Petrosian Faces Loss Of Armed Protection

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  • Ter-Petrosian Faces Loss Of Armed Protection

    TER-PETROSIAN FACES LOSS OF ARMED PROTECTION

    Radio Liberty
    March 19 2008
    Czech Republic

    In a further measure designed to thwart renewed opposition protests in
    Yerevan, the Armenian government pushed through parliament on Wednesday
    a bill that could leave former President Levon Ter-Petrosian without
    armed bodyguards provided by the state.

    Ter-Petrosian is among serving and former high-ranking state officials
    whose personal security is ensured by the State Protections Service
    (SPS) in accordance with a special law. All of his bodyguards are
    employees of the security agency run by Grisha Sarkisian, who has
    long been in charge of President Robert Kocharian's security detail.

    Under government-drafted amendments to that law adopted by the National
    Assembly in the first reading, the former president can be temporarily
    or irreversibly stripped of armed protection by the STS if he engages
    in "illicit activities." They are expected to be passed in the final
    reading on Thursday.

    Justice Minister Gevorg Danielian admitted that the amendments stem
    from the unrest that followed last month's disputed presidential
    election in which Ter-Petrosian was the main opposition candidate.

    The ex-president refused to recognize Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian's
    victory in the February 19 vote, alleging widespread fraud and rallying
    tens of thousands of supporters in Yerevan. The Armenian authorities
    used force to halt the daily protests March 1.

    Ter-Petrosian has been kept under de facto house arrest, with the
    authorities claiming that they can no longer guarantee his security.

    They say he can leave his house overlooking central Yerevan only
    after renouncing SPS protection in writing. The opposition leader
    has refused to do that so far.

    The changes in the law regulating the SPS's activities came the day
    after the government-controlled parliament amended Armenia's law on
    public gatherings in way that will make it easier for the authorities
    to ban further rallies which Ter-Petrosian plans to hold after the
    lifting of a state of emergency in Yerevan. Ter-Petrosian's office
    swiftly rejected the restrictions as unconstitutional and said
    Armenians have a "legitimate right" to ignore them.

    "It is obvious that these changes allow for an arbitrary prohibition of
    any rally," Stepan Demirchian, a prominent opposition leader allied to
    Ter-Petrosian, told RFE/RL on Wednesday. "The authorities must realize
    that it is impossible to overcome this crisis with repressive methods."
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