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Glendale: Hundreds rally on Brand

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  • Glendale: Hundreds rally on Brand

    Glendale News Press, CA
    March 22 2008


    Hundreds rally on Brand

    Protest is held to honor 8 people slain in the Republic of Armenia
    during a clash on March 1.

    By Chris Wiebe


    DOWNTOWN - Shortly after 7 p.m. on Friday, hundreds of people
    gathered along a nine-block stretch of Brand Boulevard, holding
    candles and enlarged photographs of smiling faces.

    The candles served to commemorate eight people who were killed on
    March 1 in the Republic of Armenia, when a clash between police and
    protesters turned violent. The people in the photographs were among
    the more than 800 political prisoners held by the country's
    government.

    `Any one who stands up for their rights, they are arrested as a
    political prisoner,' said Arsen, a member of the Coalition for a
    Democratic Armenia, who asked that his last name be withheld for
    safety reasons.

    The unrest in Armenia was sparked by allegations that a Feb. 19
    election was rigged in favor of Prime Minister Serge Sarkissian.

    Protesters had camped out in an area known as Freedom Square for more
    than a week before tension boiled over.

    Officials declared a state of emergency that was lifted on Friday and
    Armenians took to the streets in a `Silent March' in remembrance of
    the victims. Assembling on Brand was a way for Armenians in Glendale
    to show their support as well, Arsen said.

    `What happens here is an extension of what happened in Armenia,' he
    said.

    Organizers were expecting a few hundred demonstrators to line the
    street on Friday. And by 7:30 p.m. it seemed to be at least that,
    with many more expected. advertisement


    `This is kind of in solidarity, to commemorate the victims of the
    March 1 events and also to express support to the political prisoners
    and also denounce the actions of the government,' said Harry
    Sarafian, co-chair of the Glendale-based Coalition for a Democratic
    Armenia.

    The state of emergency declared in Armenia kept mourners from holding
    funerals and memorials because police would disperse any gathering
    crowds, Sarafian said.

    `This is the first day that people can show their support and
    commemorate the deaths,' he said.

    Shortly after the deaths in Armenia, thousands of Armenian immigrants
    took to the streets of Hollywood on March 2 to show solidarity with
    those who have denounced the election and continue to demand a
    reassessment of the voting process.

    The coalition submitted a petition to the U.S. State Department
    calling on United States officials to put pressure on Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian to end political persecution of
    demonstrators and annul the election results.
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