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Opposition Leaders Released Under Armenia Amnesty

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  • Opposition Leaders Released Under Armenia Amnesty

    OPPOSITION LEADERS RELEASED UNDER ARMENIA AMNESTY

    Agence France Presse
    June 22, 2009 Monday 11:26 AM GMT

    Armenia on Monday released four senior opposition figures, including
    a former foreign minister, convicted of organising mass protests last
    year that sparked deadly unrest.

    Former foreign minister Alexander Arzumanian, two former members of
    parliament and another opposition leader were released under a general
    amnesty after being found guilty of organising "mass disturbances."

    The four were among seven senior opposition figures charged with
    organising the protests. One was released earlier this year and two
    more are still in custody.

    Dozens of opposition activists jailed after the unrest are to be
    released under the amnesty, which was approved by parliament on Friday.

    President Serzh Sarkisian's government has been under international
    pressure to release jailed opposition supporters, including from
    the Council of Europe, which has repeatedly raised concerns about
    what it calls "artificial or politically motivated charges" against
    opposition activists.

    "Of course I am happy that my husband is being released, but I wish
    that he had been acquitted rather than freed under an amnesty,"
    Arzumanian's American wife, Melissa Brown, told AFP.

    "We are continuing our struggle for the liberation and acquittal of
    other political prisoners," she said.

    The criminal charges stemmed from street battles that broke out
    when riot police moved in to disperse thousands of supporters of
    former Armenian president Levon Ter-Petrosian rallying to denounce
    Sarkisian's victory in a February 2008 election.

    Two police officers and eight civilians were killed in the clashes and
    dozens more were injured, many from gunshot wounds. Ter-Petrosian had
    finished second in the vote and his supporters denounced the result
    as rigged.

    Armenia -- a mountainous country of about three million people
    wedged between Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran and Turkey -- has seen
    repeated political violence and post-election protests since gaining
    independence with the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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