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Armenia Frees Opposition Officials Under Amnesty

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  • Armenia Frees Opposition Officials Under Amnesty

    ARMENIA FREES OPPOSITION OFFICIALS UNDER AMNESTY

    Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/la testCrisis/idUSLM57782
    June 22 2009
    UK

    YEREVAN, June 22 (Reuters) - A former Armenian foreign minister and
    three other senior opposition figures were freed on Monday under an
    amnesty for those charged over deadly clashes in March 2008 after a
    disputed election.

    The former Soviet republic passed an amnesty bill on Friday, after
    accusations by European rights bodies of politically motivated
    arrests. Eight opposition protesters and two police officers died in
    the clashes.

    In separate trials, former foreign minister Alexander Arzumanyan and
    three others were found guilty on Friday of organising mass disorder,
    arson and pogroms, and sentenced to five years in jail.

    But they walked free under the terms of the amnesty. A fifth man did
    not qualify for the amnesty and was sentenced to eight years in jail.

    Arzumanyan was campaign chief for opposition presidential challenger
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan, whose supporters took to the streets in March
    last year to dispute the results of a presidential election won by
    current head of state Serzh Sarksyan.

    "From tomorrow I renew my fight," said one of the freed men, Suren
    Sirunyan. "We are against the amnesty, in so much as we did not commit
    any crime for which they have forgiven us," local media quoted him
    as saying.

    Some 100 people were arrested during a state of emergency after the
    violence, and more than 50 received jail terms.

    Rights groups expressed concern, and the Council of Europe criticised
    the arrest and imprisonment of people for "political reasons". The
    Council is expected to debate the issue at a sitting this week.

    Arzumanyan and his co-accused were originally accused of "usurpation of
    state power" but the charge was dropped in April. (Reporting by Hasmik
    Lazarian; writing by Matt Robinson; editing by Richard Williams)
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