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French Police Confront Protesters As Armenian President Visits Paris

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  • French Police Confront Protesters As Armenian President Visits Paris

    FRENCH POLICE CONFRONT PROTESTERS AS ARMENIAN PRESIDENT VISITS PARIS
    by Tatul Hakobyan

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-1 0-02-french-police-confront-protesters-as-armenian -president-visits-paris
    Friday October 02, 2009

    Paris - French police spent an hour dragging some 300 French-Armenian
    protesters out of the way to allow President Serge Sargsian of Armenia
    to lay a wreath at the Armenian Genocide memorial on the banks of
    the Seine River in Paris on Friday, October 2.

    Mr. Sargsian was in the French capital as part of a whirlwind tour
    of cities with large Armenian communities. The purpose of the tour
    is to discuss Armenia's Turkey policy. The protesters were opposed
    to the terms Mr. Sargsian's administration had agreed to for the
    normalization of relations with Turkey.

    At around 3 p.m. local time, the president was scheduled to lay flowers
    at the statue of the great Armenian composer and ethnomusicologist
    Gomidas, which the city of Paris erected in 2003 as a memorial to
    the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

    Holding placards reading, "To forget is to betray" in four languages,
    including Turkish, the protesters - not all of whom were young - sat
    and lay down to block the path to the statue. They chanted "No" in
    Armenian. As the atmosphere grew tenser, many used stronger language.

    Police, who outnumbered the protesters three to one, manhandled and
    dragged them to a holding area away from the statue. Some protesters
    were beaten. In that holding area, however, police treated the
    protesters calmly, providing at least one French-Armenian man with
    attention for a heart complaint.

    While taking photographs, this correspondent was struck by an officer.

    Once the protesters had been removed, the president approached
    the statue, spent a few moments there, and placed a small
    wreath. Afterward, police surrounded the statue to prevent anyone
    from flinging the wreath into the Seine.

    The Associated Press reports that Mr. Sargsian had had lunch earlier
    in the day with crooner Charles Aznavour, who serves as Armenia's
    ambassador to Switzerland. He also met with representatives of
    community organizations, as he is scheduled to do in New York on
    October 3 and Los Angeles on October 4.

    Under the protocols on the normalization of relations between
    Armenia and Turkey, the sides would recognize the current border
    and each other's territorial integrity, and would establish an
    intergovernmental commission with a sub-commission on "the historical
    dimension." The protocols are subject to parliamentary ratification
    in the two countries.

    According to the protesters, that the sub-commission would serve to
    cast doubt on the Armenian Genocide, and the language on border would
    concede historical rights. They took the position that Armenia should
    not make such concessions in order to end the Turkish blockade that
    has lasted over 16 years.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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