Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Aftermath: Anticipation Peaks Toward Friday Opposition Rally

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Aftermath: Anticipation Peaks Toward Friday Opposition Rally

    AFTERMATH: ANTICIPATION PEAKS TOWARD FRIDAY OPPOSITION RALLY

    VOTE 2013 | 22.02.13 | 14:06

    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
    ArmeniaNow

    By GOHAR ABRAHAMYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    The most-anticipated event of this post-election week following
    the Monday vote is perhaps the Friday evening public rally, which
    comes after the meeting between the oppositional candidate and the
    incumbent president, and is expected to give answers to many questions
    and clarify the opposition's action plan.

    The preliminary official results of the February 18 presidential
    elections have positioned oppositional candidate Raffi Hovannisian as
    the runner-up. Hovannisian, however, is disputing the results claiming
    the victory with the majority of votes had the election results not
    been forged. After three days of public rallies at Liberty Square,
    downtown Yerevan, Hovannisian visited the presidential residence and
    had a meeting with re-elected president Serzh Sargsyan. There are
    no details from this meeting of Heritage and ruling Republican party
    leaders yet. Hovannisian promised to speak about them at the Friday
    rally (today, February 22).

    Today's rally has been licensed by the mayor, while Heritage party
    representative Armen Martirosyan says the city hall returned the
    notifications his party had submitted about holding rallies on February
    23, 24 and 25 refusing to give permission, because "the notifications
    were submitted within violation of the deadlines set by the law".

    Martirosyan say they will, nonetheless, go ahead with the rallies.

    The previous experience with public rallies was that people complained
    of closed roads and lack of transport to the capital hindering their
    participation; these days however no such complaints have been voiced,
    which is an indication that people's participation is not obstructed.

    While Yerevan enjoys "relative peace" amidst post-election standoff,
    Armenia's border villages are again at Azeri gunpoint. In particular,
    Tavush province's Nerkin Karmiraghbyur, Aygepar, and Movses villages
    were under constant gunfire from 7 p.m. Thursday till past midnight.

    Aygepar village head Andranik Aydinyan told ArmeniaNow that for a
    few days now a sniper has been shooting at peaceful villagers once
    every hour. On Wednesday one such shot hit Aygepar resident David
    Gabrielyan, 45, wounding him in the wrist.

    Many connect the unrest on the border with the election and
    post-election processes in Armenia, although others don't see any
    particular connection, and believe that the Azeri side has always
    been aggressive to border villages over the past few years.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X