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Kocharian Warns Opposition Against More Protests

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  • Kocharian Warns Opposition Against More Protests

    KOCHARIAN WARNS OPPOSITION AGAINST MORE PROTESTS

    Radio Liberty
    March 20 2008
    Czech Republic

    President Robert Kocharian said Thursday that he will not prolong the
    state of emergency in Yerevan but warned that Armenian security bodies
    would not hesitate to break up more anti-government demonstrations
    planned by opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    Kocharian also effectively dismissed international calls for an
    independent investigation into the March 1 clashes between riot police
    and thousands of Ter-Petrosian supporters demanding a re-run of the
    February 19 presidential election.

    The violence, which left at left at least seven opposition supporters
    and one police officer dead, led to the imposition of the 20-day
    state of emergency. All rallies and other public gatherings in the
    capital were banned as a result.

    Kocharian said the Armenian authorities will not sanction rallies for
    "some time" even after the expiry of emergency rule on Friday.

    "People who shot at law-enforcers [on March 1] are still at large,
    there is no guarantee that the same people will not try to organize
    various provocations or shootings at the next rally and then blame
    that on the police," he told a news conference.

    The Armenian parliament approved this week a government bill that
    will make it easier for the authorities to prohibit anti-government
    protests. They will now be able to do that by citing threats to
    "state security, public order, public health and morality" reported
    by the police and the National Security Service. Ter-Petrosian has
    dismissed the amendments as unconstitutional.

    Kocharian warned the opposition leader, who had served as Armenia's
    first president from 1991-1998, against staging unsanctioned street
    protests. "I forbade the police from taking any steps [against
    opposition demonstrators] before the events of March 1, but will now
    demand that they take strict measures," he said, adding that he is
    determined to restore stability in the country before handing over
    power to Prime Minister and President-elect Serzh Sarkisian on April 9.

    Ter-Petrosian says that the authorities themselves instigated the worst
    street violence in Armenia's history by breaking up his supporters'
    non-stop sit-in in Yerevan's Liberty Square and then firing at
    thousands of people who gathered elsewhere in the city center later
    on March 1.

    Western powers have also questioned the official version of events,
    with the European Union and the Council of Europe urging the
    authorities in Yerevan to agree to an "independent investigation" of
    the bloodshed. Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe's commissioner
    for human rights, suggested last week that such an inquiry be conducted
    by a special commission of prominent Armenians "trusted by the public."

    Kocharian insisted, however, that Armenian law-enforcement bodies and
    the Office of the Prosecutor-General in particular are independent
    and competent enough to investigate the deadly unrest. He said they
    can only agree to international experts' involvement in their ongoing
    investigation that has resulted in mass arrests of opposition leaders
    and activists.

    Both the EU and the United States have expressed serious concern about
    the unprecedented government crackdown. U.S. Assistant Secretary
    of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried reiterated
    those concerns on Thursday, saying that Armenia should "pull itself
    together and get back on a democratic path."

    "We welcome the lifting of the state of emergency, but there are
    other problems and these need to be addressed," Fried told RFE/RL.

    "People who have been arrested for rioting and violent actions, that's
    one thing. But people who have been arrested for more questionable
    reasons need to be let go, there needs to be normalization, there
    needs to be a dialogue with the opposition."

    "Look, this is a troubling situation for all of Armenia's friends,"
    he said.

    Kocharian effectively dismissed such calls, saying that law-enforcement
    authorities have been quite lenient towards opposition protesters. He
    argued that some 800 people were detained in connection with the
    March 1 events and that only just over a hundred of them are currently
    under arrest pending trial.

    Washington threatened last week to "suspend or terminate" $236.5
    million in economic assistance which it promised to provide to Armenia
    under its Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) program. The money was
    due to be spent on the reconstruction of Armenia's battered rural
    roads and irrigation networks.

    Kocharian claimed to be untroubled by the possible termination of
    the five-year aid package, saying that the Armenian government will
    find other sources of funding for the rural development projects,
    if need be. "If they make such a decision we will look for other ways
    of fully implementing that program," he said. "I have no doubts that
    we will find those ways."

    Kocharian also downplayed U.S. President George W. Bush's failure so
    far to congratulate Sarkisian on his hotly disputed victory in the
    presidential election. Kocharian said he himself was congratulated by
    Bush only after being sworn in for a second five-year term in office
    in April 2003. That, he said, did not prevent Armenia from recording
    higher rates of economic growth and "cooperating effectively" with
    the United States in the following years. "So maybe it's a good sign,"
    he told journalists jokingly.

    In fact, Bush stopped short of congratulating Kocharian on his equally
    controversial reelection and cited instead serious irregularities
    that were reported during the Armenian presidential election
    of February-March 2003. "In a spirit of friendship, I share the
    disappointment of the OSCE and others who have observed that Armenia
    missed an opportunity to make an example of a democratic election,"
    Bush said in an April 2003 letter to Kocharian.
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