ARMENIAN OPPOSITION GETS READY TO RALLY
Marianna Grigoryan
EurasiaNet
June 17 2008
NY
Plans for a large-scale opposition rally on June 20 are sparking
concerns about the likelihood of fresh violence on the eve of a
critical vote in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
about Armenia’s efforts to reverse the effects of its March 1 crackdown
on opposition protestors.
As during this year’s presidential election campaign, the bone of
contention centers on a question of venue. The four-hour demonstration,
organized by ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s political movement,
is expected to be held at 6pm on Liberty Square in downtown Yerevan,
the preferred location for opposition protests.
But the Yerevan city government has refused to authorize a rally in
the Square, a location within easy walking distance of key government
offices.
The opposition charges politics is the reason for the refusal. The
city says it is children.
An afternoon entertainment for Yerevan youngsters has been scheduled
for the same day at the same location, and will last until the late
evening, Kamo Movsisian, head of the city department for Culture,
Sports and Youth Issues, told EurasiaNet. "Attractions for children
will be set up all over the square that day and it’s illogical to
think there is a political underpinning in that," Movsisian stated.
As an alternative, Ter-Petrosian’s Pan-National Movement proposed the
area in front of Yerevan’s centrally located Institute for Ancient
Manuscripts – the regular back-up site for opposition gatherings – but
the proposal was denied. City government representatives could not be
reached to explain their decision. The opposition claims that it was
told that the government fears that unrest could break out at the site.
Instead, the city offered Ter-Petrosian supporters a square near
Hrazdan Stadium, the country’s largest football arena, about five
kilometers from downtown Yerevan.
Arguing that protestors have been banished to the boondocks, one
Ter-Petrosian supporter terms the city’s proposal "absurd," and asserts
that it is "the people’s right" to hold a rally on Liberty Square.
"If … the application for a rally adjacent to Matenadaran [Institute
for Ancient Manuscripts] is refused based on the possibility of causing
disturbances, then can’t they be instigated near Hrazdan Stadium as
well?" asked Levon Zurabian, a senior member of the ex-president’s
Pan-National Movement. "A rally … can’t be held in an isolated
place like Hrazdan Stadium."
One pro-opposition political analyst attributes the government’s
decision to fear.
"They are afraid of the movement that has begun," argued Aghasi
Yenokian. "[T]he authorities faced a dilemma of either entering into a
dialogue with the opposition or keeping their rigid stance. They opted
for the second, and that will no doubt lead to a major explosion."
Arguably, a degree of skittishness among some government supporters is
noticeable. Parliamentarian Davit Harutiunian, head of the Armenian
delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,
told reporters on June 13 that he worries that the demonstrations
may mean more clashes.
"We don’t have specially trained detachments with the proper equipment
to prevent further negative developments with minimal damage,"
Harutiunian elaborated. "And there is a concern about that in every
sober mind."
As have other opposition members, Ter-Petrosian coalition member
Zarubian, however, put "full responsibility" for any lack of order
at the June 20 rally on the government. "The June 20 rally will take
place, and it will take place with Levon Ter-Petrosian," he declared.
Meanwhile, President Serzh Sarkisian, in what is becoming a favored
communication technique, has already delivered a televised caution
to police. Law enforcement officers, Sarkisian stressed, share the
blame for the violence on March 1.
"If the government is guilty, this means that the police are guilty
too," he said. "For the first time, the police had to deal with a
deliberate plan to stage massive unrest … I am sure that if the
combat readiness of the police were at the highest level, it would
have been possible to avoid the killing of eight citizens and two
policemen …"
The opposition’s right to rally is not in question, Sarkisian added
to reporters on hand for the meeting.
"Rallies have always been and will always be held in our country. I
have stated many times I will always defend our citizens’ right to
express their protest … Let them go hold their rally," he said.
But some Yerevan residents wonder whether Sarkisian’s target audience
was the law enforcement agencies as much as it was PACE. On June 23,
the body is scheduled to discuss whether or not to annul Armenia’s
voting rights based on its progress in meeting a series of conditions,
including removing restrictions on public demonstrations.
PACE co-rapporteurs Georges Colombier and John Prescott spent June
16-17 in Yerevan meeting with government officials, pro-government
and opposition politicians, as well as the families of those still
detained in connection with the March 1 crackdown.
The government, however, can argue that it has made progress in
meeting two additional PACE conditions. As requested, a parliamentary
committee has been established to investigate the events of March 1,
and a so-called Public Council set up to stimulate dialogue between
government, opposition and non-government representatives.
Opposition members of the Council, however, are limited to
representatives of the relatively weak and small Christian Democratic
Union, National Democratic Party of Armenia and the National Democrats’
Bloc. Representatives from the Ter-Petrosian coalition have refused
to take part.
Their absence, though, has done nothing to discourage the government’s
official conviction that it is set on the right path. A spokesperson
for Sarkisian noted on June 16 that "[d]emocratic reforms are not
limited to the implementation of the resolution’s provisions and will
be continuous," news agencies reported.