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Armenian Oppositionist Warns Against Civil Disobedience Calls

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  • Armenian Oppositionist Warns Against Civil Disobedience Calls

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITIONIST WARNS AGAINST CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE CALLS

    TERT.AM
    12:11 ~U 22.02.13

    Stepan Safaryan of the opposition Heritage party has warned against any
    attempts to make civil disobedience calls during their post election
    rallies protesting the election outcome.

    It comes after several members of the party saw in the Thursday rally's
    video record a dispute between the party's chief, Armen Martirosyan,
    and several young activists.

    "Unless [Heritage leader] Raffi Hovhannisyan or any of his supporters
    make a call for civil disobedience, he [a young activist who raised
    his voice of protest in the square on Thursday] has no right to do so.

    That was the reason behind Armen Martirosyan's anger. Especially
    because the activist, whom I respect very much, voices a call at the
    rally of a man he does not have much sympathy for," Safaryan told
    Tert.am, commenting on the incident.

    The tension was high in Liberty Square on Thursday evening before
    Hovhannisyan made his public appearance. Two young activists, Karen
    Harutyunyan (who had earlier provoked a spontaneous protest action
    at the OSCE/ODIHR election observers' news conference) and Bayandur
    Poghosyan, began making protesting remarks, questioning the expediency
    of the Heritage leader's decision to meet the re-elected president
    without consultations with the public.

    Hovhannisyan, who was Serzh Sargsyan's closest rival in the Monday
    presidential election, launched the rally in Liberty Square on February
    19 to dispute the voting results, which he claimed are tainted by
    fraud. He later urged for a meeting with Sargsyan right in the square,
    but eventually decided to go to the presidential office himself to
    discuss the matter.

    At yesterday's rally, Hovhannisyan left the square early to
    participate in the party's session. Commenting on the meeting's
    agenda, Safaryan said it was totally devoted to the protest. As for
    the Sargsyan-Kocharyan meeting, Safaryan refrained making any comment,
    referring to an earlier promise for making the information public in
    the local daily Hraparak.

    The paper said in a Friday report that the president offered three
    scenarios to Hovhannisyan at the meeting, asking him particularly to
    (1) form a new opposition pole and admit the election result, (2)
    take drastic steps together with other supporters and be ready for
    an equivalent response by the authorities, and (3) collaborate with
    the ruling Republican Party of Armenia.

    Asked whether yesterday's meeting with the re-elected president could
    have caused Hovahnnisyan to decide between saying good-bye to the
    authorities or joining a new coalition government, Safaryan answered,
    "There are, at least, two foreseeable options: either to deepen
    hostilities and achieve a regime change through a confrontation or ...

    If some now think that it is necessary to undertake steps against
    Serzh Sargsyan, they are free to do it."

    Safaryan, who is the Heritage party's political secretary, doesn't
    think their leader did something that could have damaged the party's
    reputation. "He says what he has to say without airs and graces,"
    the politician explained.


    From: Baghdasarian
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