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Armenia To Lift Emergency Rule, But Demo Ban Remains

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  • Armenia To Lift Emergency Rule, But Demo Ban Remains

    ARMENIA TO LIFT EMERGENCY RULE, BUT DEMO BAN REMAINS

    Agence France Presse
    March 20, 2008 Thursday 12:59 PM GMT

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian said a state of emergency imposed
    after clashes in Yerevan earlier this month will be lifted from Friday
    but a ban on demonstrations will remain in place.

    "Today is the last day of the state of emergency in Yerevan. I do
    not have any reason to extend it," Kocharian said on Thursday at
    his last news conference before new president Serzh Sarkisian, the
    current prime minister, is inaugurated on April 9.

    "I need to pass on a stable country and government to the newly
    elected president," Kocharian said.

    Despite lifting the state of emergency, Kocharian said that rallies
    would not be allowed.

    "Whilst the people who took up arms against the police are still on
    the wanted list there is no guarantee that they will not try again
    to destabilise the situation," he said.

    The 20-day state of emergency was declared on March 1 after eight
    people died in street battles between riot police and opposition
    supporters in the capital Yerevan. The violence also injured dozens,
    many from gunshot wounds.

    Police arrested more than 50 people in connection with the unrest,
    which broke out after riot police dispersed protesters who had rallied
    for 11 days against a presidential election officially won by Prime
    Minister Sarkisian.

    Opposition supporters claim the election was rigged to ensure
    Sarkisian's victory over former president Levon Ter-Petrosian, though
    foreign observers said the vote was mostly in line with international
    standards.

    A mountainous country of about three million people wedged between
    Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran and Turkey, Armenia has seen repeated
    political violence since gaining its independence with the Soviet
    collapse of 1991.
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