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New Crowd Control Rules Approved For Armenian Police

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  • New Crowd Control Rules Approved For Armenian Police

    New Crowd Control Rules Approved For Armenian Police

    Armenia -- Riot police guard Yerevan's Liberty Square moments before
    allowing the opposition Armenian National Congress to hold a
    demonstration there, 17Mar2011

    Ruzanna Stepanian

    17.02.2012

    Security forces should avoid using force against peaceful protesters
    and resort to firearms only in case of extremely violent riots,
    according to new rules for crowd control adopted by Armenian police.

    The detailed `guidelines' for riot police were elaborated with expert
    assistance from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe and approved by Vladimir Gasparian, chief of the national
    police, late last year.

    The guidelines specify the types of `special means' which the police
    can use to deal with `armed resistance' and demonstrations that turn
    violent and `endanger public safety.' Those include batons,
    electric-shock guns, stun grenades and rubber bullets.

    There is no reference to Russian-made tear gas capsules that were
    mishandled by police officers during the March 2008 post-election
    clashes [read: state-sponsored slaughter and military coup] in Yerevan
    which left eight opposition protesters and two police personnel dead.
    Four of the civilian victims are believed to haven killed by such
    capsules. The others were shot dead by live rounds fired by security
    forces.

    The March 2008 events [read: slaughter and coup] were the worst street
    violence in Armenia's history that still reverberates on the local
    political scene. The Armenian authorities insist that they used deadly
    force to end `mass disturbances' organized by close associates of
    opposition presidential candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian with the aim of
    forcibly toppling the government. Ter-Petrosian and his Armenian
    National Congress (HAK) vehemently deny the official theory, saying
    that the authorities deliberately killed people to enforce the results
    of a fraudulent presidential election.

    The new police guidelines stipulate that police officers can use
    firearms only if the conventional riot gear and other `special means'
    fail to contain a violent crowd. But they are not allowed to open fire
    when there are `substantial concentrations of people' carrying a high
    risk of injuring innocent civilians. They should not use force at all
    if a demonstration proceeds peacefully, according to the document.

    `The purpose of such changes is to minimize all those cases where a
    police officer could act in an inadequate way,' Artur Osikian, a
    deputy chief of the police, told RFE/RL's Armenian service
    (Azatutyun.am). But he would not say if they are specifically aimed at
    preventing a repeat of the 2008 bloodshed.

    Nikol Pashinian, a senior HAK figure who spent about two years in
    prison for his role in that unrest [read: slaughter and coup],
    dismissed the guidelines, saying that their absence in 2008 was not
    the main reason for the loss of life. `These guidelines say nothing
    about what should be done if the authorities themselves organize mass
    riots to use force against a peaceful demonstration,' he said.

    Pashinian argued that the authorities should simply stop rigging
    elections if they really want to avert such violence in the future.
    `Mass disturbances simply won't happen if legitimate elections are
    held in the country,' he told RFE/RL's Armenian service.

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/article/24487962.html

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