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From Politics Back To "Ecology": Elections Over, Mashtots Saga Conti

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  • From Politics Back To "Ecology": Elections Over, Mashtots Saga Conti

    FROM POLITICS BACK TO "ECOLOGY": ELECTIONS OVER, MASHTOTS SAGA CONTINUES
    By Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow
    11.05.12

    At their Friday press conference civil activists said they will
    continue the fight.

    Civic activists that have fought against construction in a Yerevan
    park said at a press conference Friday that Yerevan Mayor Taron
    Margaryan, Chief Architect Narek Sargsyan, deputy chief of the Yerevan
    police Robert Melkonyan and police officers Valery Osikyan and Karen
    Movsisyan should be held accountable for what they view an illegal
    decision to install trade facilities in the park and the police for
    "using violence against and illegally detaining citizens that were
    defending their constitutional rights."

    Meanwhile, the standoff shifted to cyberspace as passions calmed down
    on the ground.

    "Elections over, reaction has started. The Mashtots park saga
    continues," say some social-network activists.

    Online chat exchanges speculate that after last Sunday's elections
    that gave President Serzh Sargsyan's Republican Party a landslide
    victory he will take revenge for having been forced to yield to the
    demands of the protesters to have a number of pavilions dismantled
    in the park in the days leading to the vote.

    For three months a group of young activists conducted open-ended
    protest campaigns to prevent the construction of shopping pavilions
    in a downtown park off Yerevan's main Mashtots Boulevard. A month
    ago they were joined by a group of leading scholars who set up ten
    "dismantling brigades". Three times they made peaceful attempts to
    dismantle the facilities, but they met police cordons each time. The
    mayor had failed to provide legal grounds for the construction.

    The latest attempt at dismantling the facilities on April 29 as well as
    an ensuing brawl over the right to put up a tent in the area resulted
    in clashes in which several activists and policemen suffered minor
    injuries. A number of environmental activists and one member of the
    "dismantling brigade" were briefly detained by police then. But most
    significantly, the activists then promised to try to do it again on
    May 6 - the voting day in Armenia's parliamentary elections.

    On May 3 President Serzh Sargsyan accompanied by Yerevan Mayor Taron
    Margaryan made an unexpected visit to the park. In a paternal manner,
    the president and leader of the ruling party, of which Margaryan
    is a member, asked the young mayor to have the shops dismantled,
    saying that they looked ugly. Many perceived it as a forced retreat
    by Sargsyan on the eve of the elections.

    By May 9 the shops had completely been dismantled, with the mayor
    promising that they would not even be moved to another location and
    that the owners understood the situation and would not insist on
    their rights to owning those pavilions.

    In a statement released on May 10, however, the police said that
    after a series of measures taken by law enforcement it was decided
    to institute criminal proceedings against a number of participants in
    the April 29 clashes suspected of using non-life-threatening violence
    against police officers.

    It is noteworthy that the decision came immediately after lawmakers
    from the opposition Heritage party, who in April sued the mayor's
    office demanding that it justify the construction project in the park,
    withdraw its lawsuit on May 9 over its becoming a moot point.

    On Saturday, activists and citizens are going to mark their victory
    in Mashtots Park. However, it is certain to be overshadowed by the
    criminal cases against some of the campaigners. Generally, activists
    say their actions were lawful and they did not break any law, while
    only defending their rights as citizens.

    Meanwhile, some news transpired on Friday that one of the activists
    was being prosecuted for his calls related to Mashots park action
    made through Facebook. The police later denied the information.

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