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Council Of Europe Body Urges Inquiry Into Armenia Unrest

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  • Council Of Europe Body Urges Inquiry Into Armenia Unrest

    COUNCIL OF EUROPE BODY URGES INQUIRY INTO ARMENIA UNREST

    Asbarez
    Mar 22nd, 2010

    Armenian tanks took to the streets of Yerevan following the clashes
    in March 2008 between security forces and opposition protesters that
    left 10 people dead.

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-A key Council of Europe watchdog has called for
    a public inquiry into the 2008 postelection unrest in Yerevan and
    expressed concern about the reported ill-treatment of dozens of
    opposition members who were arrested in Armenia, RFE/RL's Armenian
    Service reports.

    In an extensive report, the Committee for the Prevention of Torture
    (CPT) said on March 19 that the authorities must finally "make it
    clear to all law enforcement staff that the ill-treatment of persons
    in their custody is illegal and will be dealt with severely in the
    form of criminal prosecution."

    The report details the findings of a CPT team that visited Armenia in
    the aftermath of the March 2008 clashes in Yerevan between security
    forces and opposition protesters that left 10 people dead.

    It is unclear why the Strasbourg-based body took two years to publish
    the report. CPT officials interviewed some 70 supporters of opposition
    leader Levon Ter-Petrossian who were under arrest at the time.

    Virtually all of them claimed to have been ill-treated during their
    detentions.

    In a written response to the report also released by the CPT the
    same day, the Armenian government effectively dismissed the torture
    allegations.

    "The police haven't received any application on actions of torture,
    beating, or degrading dignity by police officers from the detained
    persons, their lawyers, or legal representatives in relation to the
    postelection events during the eight months of 2008," it said.

    The CPT insisted, however, that the authorities in Yerevan have yet
    to honor their past pledges to tackle police brutality.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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