Tuesday,
Armenia To Compensate Victims Of 2008 Violence
Armenia -- Opposition supporters pay tribute to victims of March 1, 2008
violence in Yerevan, 01Mar2013
The Armenian parliament unanimously passed on Tuesday a bill requiring the
government to compensate the families of ten people killed in the 2008
post-election violence in Yerevan.
The bill drafted by two senior pro-government lawmakers also calls for
compensations to be paid to dozens of other protesters and security personnel
who were seriously injured at the time.
It makes clear, however, that police officers who are under investigation or
have already been convicted of using excessive force against anti-government
protesters will not be eligible for any aid. The amount and form of the
compensation will be determined by the Armenian government.
According to official data provided by law-enforcement authorities, 63
protesters and police officers sustained “injuries of medium and severe
gravity” during the forcible dispersal of opposition demonstrations held in the
wake of the February 2008 presidential election.
Levon Ter-Petrosian, the main opposition presidential candidate, rejected as
fraudulent official election results which give victory to Serzh Sarkisian,
outgoing President Robert Kocharian’s preferred successor. Ter-Petrosian and
his allies rallied supporters on a daily basis to demand a rerun of the vote.
Security forces broke up those protests on March 1-2, 2008. Eight protesters
and two police servicemen died as a result.
The former Armenian authorities accused the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition of
organizing the “mass disturbances” in a bid to seize power. They jailed dozens
of opposition figures, including Nikol Pashinian, on corresponding charges
denied by the latter.
Investigators radically changed the official version of events shortly after
last year’s “velvet revolution” which brought Pashinian to power. They charged
Kocharian and three retired army generals with illegally using the Armenian
armed forces against the protesters and thus overthrowing the constitutional
order in February-March 2008. All four men, who went on trial last month, deny
the accusations.
Jailed General ‘Denied Adequate Medical Aid’
• Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- Retired General Manvel Grigorian appears before a court in Yerevan,
May 13, 2019.
Manvel Grigorian, a retired Armenian army general facing various criminal
charges, failed to appear before a Yerevan court on Tuesday after being forced
to leave a civilian hospital.
Grigorian’s absence led the court to adjourn the latest session of his and
wife’s high-profile trial which began last month.
Grigorian, who suffers from multiple diseases, was hospitalized in February one
month after being arrested again. Investigators transferred him from the
private Nairi Medical Center to a prison hospital in Yerevan against his will
on Monday.
“We met him this morning,” Grigorian’s lawyer Levon Baghdasarian told the
presiding judge. “He is refusing to undergo treatment there, and I want to let
you know that he is being held there illegally and that his life is in danger.”
“A person diagnosed with over a dozen diseases has not received treatment for
about 12 hours and this is the reason why Mr. Grigorian is not present at the
court session today,” said Baghdasarian.
The trial prosecutor, Vahe Dolmazian, dismissed the lawyer’s protests, saying
that arrested criminal suspects cannot decide whether they should be held.
Grigorian, who had served as Armenia’s deputy defense minister from 2000-2008,
was first arrested in June last year following searches conducted at his
properties in and around the town of Echmiadzin. Investigators found there many
weapons, ammunition, medication and field rations for soldiers provided by the
Armenian Defense Ministry.
They also discovered canned food and several vehicles donated by Armenians at
one of Grigorian’s mansions. An official video of the searches conducted by the
National Security Service (NSS) caused shock and indignation in the country.
Grigorian was also charged with tax evasion and extortion in February. His
wife, Nazik Amirian, was indicted on some of these charges but not arrested.
Both Grigorian and Amirian pleaded not guilty to the accusations when they went
on trial on May 13.
Armenia, Cyprus, Greece Agree On ‘Trilateral Partnership’
Cyprus -- Foreign Ministers Nikos Christodoulides (C) of Cyprus, George
Katrougalos of Greece (R) and Zohrab Mnatsakanian of Armenia shake hands after
talks held in Nicosia, June 4, 2019.
The foreign ministers of Cyprus, Greece and Armenia pledged to deepen relations
between their countries at a first-ever trilateral meeting held in the Cypriot
capital Nicosia on Tuesday.
“The purpose of the trilateral cooperation between our countries … is the
promotion of peace, stability and prosperity through enhanced political
dialogue and cooperation among the three countries,” Cyprus’s Foreign Minister
Nikos Christodoulides said after the talks.
“Today’s meeting reflects very clearly our joint determination to further
expand and deepen our cooperation and to develop synergies that will benefit
our countries and our peoples,” he told a joint news conference with Foreign
Ministers George Katrougalos of Greece and Zohrab Mnatsakanian of Armenia.
Christodoulides said they agreed to “explore opportunities for cooperation” in
a wide range of areas, including trade, agriculture and tourism. The three
nations will also step up their cooperation in international organizations and
coordinate “the action of our diasporas in important decision-making centers
worldwide,” he said.
“Our three countries are very like-minded, peace-loving countries and believe
that international law and respect for multilateralism form the basis of
international relations,” Katrougalos said for his part. “And, of course, we
share a long history together.”
“The next step is going to be the trilateral summit among the leaders of our
countries,” he added.
The Greek and Cypriot ministers also voiced strong support for Armenia’s
efforts to forge closer ties with the European Union. “We intend to help, as
much as we can, Armenia in its European perspectives,” said Katrougalos.
The three countries share a long history of mutual animosity with Turkey.
Meeting in 2016 with then Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian, Greece’s Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras said the Armenian and Greek peoples were both victims
of genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks during World War One. Ankara
condemned that statement.
Turkey refuses to establish diplomatic relations and open its borders with
Armenia because of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The Karabakh issue was also
on the agenda of the Nicosia meeting, according to Christodoulides.
Christodoulides said he also briefed his Greek and Armenian counterparts on
“Turkey’s escalated illegal activities in the Exclusive Economic Zone of the
Republic of Cyprus.” In that regard, Katrougalos condemned Turkish
“provocations” against the east Mediterranean island partly occupied by Turkish
troops.
Press Review
“Aravot” says the pro-government majority in Armenia’s parliament should not be
blamed for “stubbornly rejecting apolitical specialists” nominated by President
Armen Sarkissian for the Constitutional Court and planning to install instead a
“political ally” as a member of the court. “The problem lies in the
constitution, which essentially enables the ruling political force to have a
Constitutional Court subordinate to it,” explains the paper. It is surprised
that former officials who enacted that constitution as recently as in 2015 are
now complaining about the ruling My Step alliance’s partisanship.
“Zhoghovurd” says that the Constitutional Court chairman, Hrayr Tovmasian, has
defied the government following former President Robert Kocharian’s release
from jail and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resulting harsh criticism of the
Armenian judiciary. The paper points to Tovmasian’s trip to Nagorno-Karabakh
and a media interview in which he hinted that he has no intention to resign and
criticized Pashinian’s critical statements on the judicial system. “In other
words, he is openly resisting,” it says. “It will be interesting to see how
long this resistance will last.”
“The former authorities and their paid and ‘ideological’ supporters are clearly
buoyed by ‘velvet’ methods of the revolution and think that with their
aggressive propaganda they can erase the people’s memory and even go on a
counteroffensive,” writes “Haykakan Zhamanak.” “They think that the closure of
streets and the rallies attended by hundreds of thousands of people are the
only things that remain in the people’s memory of the April [2018] revolution.
They have already forgotten what led the hundreds of thousands of people to
take to the streets. Actually they have not. It’s just that the [current]
authorities are now busy with more important things and do not remind them of
that.”
“Zhamanak” reports that the Special Investigative Service (SIS) has
interrogated Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian in
connection with the events of March 2008 in Yerevan. The paper says that an SIS
spokeswoman refused to comment on this information. It cites other, unnamed
sources saying that Tsarukian’s interrogation lasted for several hours and that
he was mainly questioned about his bodyguards’ alleged involvement in the 2008
crackdown.
(Tatevik Lazarian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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