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Police Ensure Renewed Shop Construction In Yerevan Park

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  • Police Ensure Renewed Shop Construction In Yerevan Park

    POLICE ENSURE RENEWED SHOP CONSTRUCTION IN YEREVAN PARK

    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24491712.html
    21.02.2012

    Armenia - Clothing shops built in a public park in downtown Yerevan,
    21 Feb2012. Karlen Aslanian

    The highly controversial construction of shops in a public park in
    central Yerevan resumed overnight and continued on Tuesday after riot
    police returned there to ward off more protests by environmental and
    civic activists.

    The construction site was again cordoned off by the police late on
    Monday after more than 100 activists ended a protest against what they
    consider further damage to Yerevanâ~@~Ys shrinking green areas. The
    mostly young activists broke through the police cordon to halt the
    construction work earlier in the day.

    Many of them again gathered in the small park on Tuesday but were
    kept at bay by scores of police officers guarding the site. They
    were furious with the authoritiesâ~@~Y decision to capitalize on
    the nightfall.

    â~@~\We are not going to retreat,â~@~] one young woman told
    RFE/RLâ~@~Ys Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). â~@~\This is ridiculous,
    these steps are the beginning of their defeat.â~@~]

    â~@~\I have every right to stand here,â~@~] said another female
    protester.

    "This is my park. No police officer has the right to push me out
    of here."

    Throughout the day prominent public figures and ordinary citizens
    visited the protesters to express sympathy for their campaign which
    has gained a public resonance despite receiving little coverage
    from government-controlled TV stations. Meruzhan Ter-Gulanian, a
    pro-establishment writer, was among them. Speaking to RFE/RL's Armenian
    service, he urged the still unknown shop owners "to abandon all this
    for the sake of Yerevan." Ter-Gulanian also said the city's under-fire
    Mayor Taron Markarian lacks the power to stop the construction.

    Markarian defended the authorities' refusal to bow to the pressure in
    a statement issued later on Tuesday. He said that the new kiosks will
    stand in the park "temporarily" and will cause no harm to its trees.

    "Important and complex issues related to property ownership cannot
    be solved on the basis of certain citizens' subjective understanding
    of justice," Markarian said. "Nevertheless, despite the negative and
    critical evaluations, I am happy that my fellow city residents are
    so concerned about the problems and the future of our beloved Yerevan."

    The Armenia police defended their actions in a separate statement
    saying that they are obliged to enforce municipality decisions
    and that only courts can determine their legality challenged by the
    protesters. The statement warned that activists defying police orders
    will face "administrative punishment."

    The police also offered to hold a roundtable discussion with relevant
    civic groups on "the legal grounds for the police actions" in the park.

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