SEARCH FOR CULPRITS FOLLOWS ARMENIAN RALLY BLAST
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
http://iwpr.net/report-news/search-culprits-follows-armenian-rally-blast
May 11 2012
UK
Hydrogen-filled balloons injure over 100, raise allegations of negligence.
By Naira Melkumyan - Caucasus
CRS Issue 641
Angry Yerevan residents are demanding to know who is to blame for a
gas explosion that injured dozens at a campaign rally on the eve of
Armenia's parliamentary election.
Initial police investigations suggest the May 4 blast was caused by
a cigarette igniting balloons in the middle of the crowd attending
a campaign rally and concert staged by the governing Republican Party.
The balloons should have been filled with the inert gas helium,
but organisers appear to have used highly flammable - but cheaper
- hydrogen.
Around 154 people, including children, were injured by the sheet
of flame that swept over crowd. The rally nevertheless continued,
and President Serzh Sargsyan, head of the Republican Party, carried
on and gave a his speech.
"The Republican Party as the rally organisers are responsible not just
for the balloon explosion, but also for the fact people were forced
to wait on the square until Serzh Sargsyan's speech ended. You can't
justify this by citing the need to avoid panic. If the aim was to
avoid panic, then Sargsyan would not have made a speech after such an
event," said Tsovinar Nazaryan, an activist from the Army in Reality
civil group.
Although a police investigation is ongoing, Nazaryan said it would
be difficult to find who exactly was to blame.
"It's a shame that in our country it is hard to separate institutions
and say who specifically is at fault. But all the same I think the
Republican Party is guilty," she said.
According to figures released on May 10, some 70 people were still
undergoing treatment in hospitals, with ten still in intensive care.
Most of the victims were students and members of the Republican Party's
youth wing who were closest to the stage. They included people who
were holding the balloons when they exploded, and were then burned
by plastic that caught fire. Nylon waistcoats bearing the Republican
Party logo also caught fire.
Eyewitnesses described how the flames burst outwards so quickly they
did not have time to react.
"I fell to the ground after the explosion. My face, hand and back were
burned, and I was taken to hospital in a police car. The people who
filled these balloons with explosive gas are to blame for not thinking
of the possible consequences. I am really angry with these people,"
said Andranik Mirzoyan, 20. "Nothing can compensate for the pain and
stress which we and our parents have gone through."
Prosecutors opened a criminal case under a law relating to the safe
use and storage of explosive materials.
Rival parties took the opportunity to attack the Republican Party
for failing to halt the concert, although it did not harm the party's
electoral performance, since it emerged from the May 6 polls in first
place with 44 per cent of the vote.
"The concert continued for two hours after the explosion. I am
shocked that at such a critical moment, the government behaved so
inadequately. It's not just that there shouldn't have been a concert.
In such circumstances it was intolerable to have a single speech,"
Vardan Oskanyan, head of the rival Prosperous Armenia party, which
came second with 30 per cent, said.
The Republican Party replied that it would have been irresponsible
to halt the concert abruptly.
"I would say it would have been a crime. If the concert was stopped
suddenly, then panic could have started. Apart from this, people had
started to leave the square in large numbers, and this could have
led to traffic jams so that ambulances wouldn't have been able to
reach the square rapidly," said Hovik Abrahamyan, head of the party's
campaign team.
After making his speech, the president and Health Minister Harutyun
Kushkyan visited the injured in hospital.
"Thanks be to God, we avoided the worst consequences. At the moment,
all the injured are receiving the treatment they need, with good
results. If necessary, we will summon the best foreign specialists
to Armenia," Sargsyan said in a statement.
His party promised to give all assistance to the injured, and provide
compensation as required.
"The injured are our children, our brothers and sisters. I know some
of them personally since most of them are members of the youth wing
of the party. We will do everything to help them get well again,"
said Eduard Sharmazanov, spokesman for the Republican Party and deputy
speaker of parliament.
Naira Melkumyan is a freelance journalist in Armenia.
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
http://iwpr.net/report-news/search-culprits-follows-armenian-rally-blast
May 11 2012
UK
Hydrogen-filled balloons injure over 100, raise allegations of negligence.
By Naira Melkumyan - Caucasus
CRS Issue 641
Angry Yerevan residents are demanding to know who is to blame for a
gas explosion that injured dozens at a campaign rally on the eve of
Armenia's parliamentary election.
Initial police investigations suggest the May 4 blast was caused by
a cigarette igniting balloons in the middle of the crowd attending
a campaign rally and concert staged by the governing Republican Party.
The balloons should have been filled with the inert gas helium,
but organisers appear to have used highly flammable - but cheaper
- hydrogen.
Around 154 people, including children, were injured by the sheet
of flame that swept over crowd. The rally nevertheless continued,
and President Serzh Sargsyan, head of the Republican Party, carried
on and gave a his speech.
"The Republican Party as the rally organisers are responsible not just
for the balloon explosion, but also for the fact people were forced
to wait on the square until Serzh Sargsyan's speech ended. You can't
justify this by citing the need to avoid panic. If the aim was to
avoid panic, then Sargsyan would not have made a speech after such an
event," said Tsovinar Nazaryan, an activist from the Army in Reality
civil group.
Although a police investigation is ongoing, Nazaryan said it would
be difficult to find who exactly was to blame.
"It's a shame that in our country it is hard to separate institutions
and say who specifically is at fault. But all the same I think the
Republican Party is guilty," she said.
According to figures released on May 10, some 70 people were still
undergoing treatment in hospitals, with ten still in intensive care.
Most of the victims were students and members of the Republican Party's
youth wing who were closest to the stage. They included people who
were holding the balloons when they exploded, and were then burned
by plastic that caught fire. Nylon waistcoats bearing the Republican
Party logo also caught fire.
Eyewitnesses described how the flames burst outwards so quickly they
did not have time to react.
"I fell to the ground after the explosion. My face, hand and back were
burned, and I was taken to hospital in a police car. The people who
filled these balloons with explosive gas are to blame for not thinking
of the possible consequences. I am really angry with these people,"
said Andranik Mirzoyan, 20. "Nothing can compensate for the pain and
stress which we and our parents have gone through."
Prosecutors opened a criminal case under a law relating to the safe
use and storage of explosive materials.
Rival parties took the opportunity to attack the Republican Party
for failing to halt the concert, although it did not harm the party's
electoral performance, since it emerged from the May 6 polls in first
place with 44 per cent of the vote.
"The concert continued for two hours after the explosion. I am
shocked that at such a critical moment, the government behaved so
inadequately. It's not just that there shouldn't have been a concert.
In such circumstances it was intolerable to have a single speech,"
Vardan Oskanyan, head of the rival Prosperous Armenia party, which
came second with 30 per cent, said.
The Republican Party replied that it would have been irresponsible
to halt the concert abruptly.
"I would say it would have been a crime. If the concert was stopped
suddenly, then panic could have started. Apart from this, people had
started to leave the square in large numbers, and this could have
led to traffic jams so that ambulances wouldn't have been able to
reach the square rapidly," said Hovik Abrahamyan, head of the party's
campaign team.
After making his speech, the president and Health Minister Harutyun
Kushkyan visited the injured in hospital.
"Thanks be to God, we avoided the worst consequences. At the moment,
all the injured are receiving the treatment they need, with good
results. If necessary, we will summon the best foreign specialists
to Armenia," Sargsyan said in a statement.
His party promised to give all assistance to the injured, and provide
compensation as required.
"The injured are our children, our brothers and sisters. I know some
of them personally since most of them are members of the youth wing
of the party. We will do everything to help them get well again,"
said Eduard Sharmazanov, spokesman for the Republican Party and deputy
speaker of parliament.
Naira Melkumyan is a freelance journalist in Armenia.