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ANKARA: Armenian Opposition Journalist Jailed Over Unrest

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Opposition Journalist Jailed Over Unrest

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION JOURNALIST JAILED OVER UNREST

    Hurriyet
    Jan 21 2010
    Turkey

    An Armenian court sentenced an opposition journalist to seven years
    in prison for his involvement in mass post-election protests that
    sparked deadly unrest, a court spokeswoman said.

    Nikol Pashinian, a prominent opposition figure and editor of the
    Haykakan Zhamanak newspaper, was convicted on charges of "organizing
    mass unrest", Yerevan district court spokeswoman Alina Engoian told
    AFP. Pashinian was a key organiser of opposition protests following
    President Serzh Sarkisian's victory in a February 2008 election.

    Street battles broke out when riot police moved in to disperse
    thousands of supporters of former Armenian president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, who came second in the vote. Two police officers
    and eight civilians were killed in the clashes and dozens more
    were injured, many from gunshot wounds. Pashinian went into hiding
    following the unrest, but turned himself in to authorities in July. He
    ran unsuccessfully in a parliamentary by-election earlier this month
    in an attempt to gain immunity from prosecution.

    A spokesman for Ter-Petrosian's opposition Armenian National Congress
    said the sentence flew in the face of Armenian law and the country's
    international commitments. "This is lawlessness. This shows how the
    current regime flouts not only the law, but resolutions of the Council
    of Europe, which has called for people who did not carry out violent
    acts and who presented themselves before the law to be acquitted,"
    said the spokesman, Levon Zurabian.

    Rights body the Council of Europe has repeatedly raised concerns about
    what it calls "artificial or politically motivated charges" against
    opposition activists related to the unrest. 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.
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