Thousands protest in Armenia against re-elected president

Chicago Tribune, IL
Feb 23 2013

Thousands protest in Armenia against re-elected president

February 22, 2013|Hasmik Lazarian | Reuters

YEREVAN (Reuters) – Thousands of people protested in Armenia’s capital
Yerevan on Friday against the re-election of President Serzh Sarksyan,
asserting that an opposition party leader was the real winner.

International monitors said Monday’s vote was an improvement on recent
elections in Armenia but there was little competition as some of
Sarksyan’s most prominent rivals did not run, saying the result was
likely to be skewed to deliver him victory.

The rally in Yerevan’s Freedom Square was peaceful and there were no
protests in other cities in the ex-Soviet republic. But analysts are
concerned about instability in a region that is a key transit route
for Caspian gas and oil deliveries to Europe.

Backers of Sarksyan’s second-placed rival Raffi Hovannisian chanted
“Raffi! Raffi!” and “Armenia! Armenia” at the rally, alleging that the
vote was rigged in favor of the Sarksyan.

“We should carry on our fight calmly and according to the
constitution. Our democratic movement will not stop and we will
achieve victory,” Hovannisian told the crowd, raising a clenched fist
over his head.

“Welcome Armenia! You are the people, you have chosen your servant,”
U.S.-born Hovannisian, accompanied by his wife and son, said to the
protesters, who were waving Armenian flags.

Hovannisian told protesters that the president, at a meeting on
Thursday, rejected his demand for a rerun of the vote.

Official results showed Sarksyan winning 58.6 percent of the votes,
compared to nearly 37 percent for Hovannisian.

Hovannisian said he would start touring cities and villages where he
polled ahead of Sarksyan in the election, before staging another
protest rally in the same square on Sunday.

“There is a ‘tradition’ in post-Soviet countries that those who scored
second or third positions always question results of elections, no
matter what,” said analyst Sergei Minasyan.

“I think Raffi Hovannisian is aiming for a long march that would
somehow unite the opposition to keep up the pressure and maybe benefit
from it in the approaching elections for local governments, including
for the Yerevan mayor.”

The disputed result of the 2008 presidential election triggered
violent unrest in which 10 people were killed.

Armenia, a South Caucasus country of 3.2 million that has a collective
security deal with Russia, is also locked in dispute with neighbor
Azerbaijan over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

About 30,000 people were killed in a 1990s war between the neighbors
over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian-majority enclave inside
Azerbaijan, which Armenian-backed rebels wrested from Azeri troops.

(Writing by Gabriela Baczynska; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-02-22/news/sns-rt-us-armenia-protestbre91l0y4-20130222_1_raffi-hovannisian-improvement-on-recent-elections-president-serzh-sarksyan

A Story of Defiance: Activists Reject International Observers’ Asses

A Story of Defiance: Activists Reject International Observers’
Assessment of Election

by Nanore Barsoumian

February 23, 2013

YEREVAN (A.W.) – On Feb. 19, some ten minutes into a press conference
during which the international election observation mission presented
their assessment of the Feb. 18 Armenian presidential election, a
young woman marched to the front of the room, slipped away from the
grip of the security personnel, faced the media, and began reading
from her clipboard, her small voice unfazed, floating above the voices
in the crowd.

Lena Nazaryan reads her statement during the press conference.
`Dear political tourists, we have had enough of your efforts to
legitimize the fraudulent elections,’ she read. `The recent
presidential election in Armenia, when compared to previous
presidential elections, has registered one step forward and three
steps backwards, two steps to the right and half a step to the left.
In other words, they haven’t corresponded to the Constitution of
Armenia, to the requirements of the Election Code, and to
international standards.’

By disrupting the press conference that would in effect rubber-stamp
the results of the election, Lena Nazaryan wanted to convey to her
compatriots and the world that only the citizens of Armenia could
grant legitimacy to those elected.

Nazaryan later told the Armenian Weekly that she knew she would not
remain silent if the assessment presented by the international
observers ultimately acquiesced to the authorities and – what she
considered – their brazen efforts to steal the election. `I had decided
to interrupt the conference if I deemed it to contradict reality. And
that’s what I did,’ she said.

`I am certain that the elections were rigged,’ she continued. `I was
not asking the [international observers] to revise their assessment. I
simply wanted to tell the citizens of Armenia that they are the ones
who should assess the elections, and they are the ones who have to
guard their votes. I’ve never been a Heritage Party supporter, but I
am ready to protect the rights of all those citizens who cast their
votes for Raffi Hovannisian.’

A day earlier, Nazaryan spent the day, well into the night, as an
observer at precincts 17/2 and 17/3 in Ardashad, where she faced
harassment throughout the day. She was called an `idiot’ and told to
`get lost’ by a man, presumably a voter, appearing to be friends with
the Republican Party proxy stationed there. Her efforts to document
events on her video camera – something she says she is allowed to do as
an observer – were met with resistance. Even the Republican Party proxy
would threaten her. The president of the precinct remained
disinterested, refraining from admonishing trouble-makers.

`Their aim was to drive me away from that precinct. Throughout the
day, insults were hurled at me. The president of that precinct was on
more than friendly terms with the Republican representatives; they
whispered in corners throughout the day, and he did not miss a chance
to verbally attack me. It was clear that I was interfering with their
plans,’ she said.

In the adjacent Precinct 17/2, where Nazaryan’s colleague was
stationed as an observer, the situation seems to have been worse.
`There was ballot stuffing, the observer’s video camera was stolen, he
was constantly cursed and subjected to threats, and there was even an
invitation to participate in a `carousel,” said Nazaryan, who was one
of the 48 `Europe in Law Association’ observers and around 6,250
registered local observers that day. A carousel is a form of election
fraud whereby a pre-marked ballot is given to a voter who is asked to
return with an unmarked one in order to get paid.

By the end of Election Day, over 350 instances of irregularities,
ranging from threats to bribery and vote rigging, were reported on the
online election monitoring site iDitord.org.

Nazaryan told the Weekly that she felt `hopeless’ and `disappointed’
upon returning to Yerevan. Then, she received a phone-call from a
friend, who informed her that the international observers were
preparing to give a statement – most likely, a wishy-washy, vague
assessment, she said. The friend told her that, along with a few
others, they were preparing an alternative text. `Someone had to do
it,’ said Nazaryan. `So, I too went to Marriott and I waited until
they were done presenting their argument. Their assessment did not
correspond with reality. They said that Armenia had taken a step
forward, when compared to the previous elections, and that it would
soon become a democracy. They didn’t say how many kilometers were left
to reach democracy. Everything was clear to me by then. I interrupted
their event and said the following: `Dear political tourists, you are
legitimizing the fraudulent elections. You are trampling upon the very
same democratic principles that you yourselves have adopted.”

`This was my personal response to the treacherous, foul mouthed,
thuggish and criminal local representatives of the Republican Party at
precincts 17/2 and 17/3, and the presidents of the local precincts who
sold their principles and did not remain accountable to local
observers. They cursed and harassed the local observers, and assumed
an angelic demeanor in the presence of the international ones,’ she
said.

And that is why she believes the conclusion reached by her and her
peers represent the realities on the ground, and not the manicured
version witnessed by the international observers during their short
visits to the precincts.

Nazaryan is not alone. Many others have criticized the assessment
presented by the international election observation mission comprising
of representatives from the Organization for Security and Co-operation
in Europe (OSCE), Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
(PACE), and the European Parliament (EP). Although the international
observer mission did note `some key concerns,’ overall it deemed the
election `well-administered,’ and `characterized by a respect for
fundamental freedoms.’ Personal accounts from observers, journalists,
and citizens that have appeared on news and social networking sites
challenge that conclusion. One such account, the story of a
Transparency International observer Narine Esmaeili who was pinned
against the wall while ballot stuffing took place, went viral on
social networking sites. The international observation mission did not
allude to that incident in their statements, even though, according to
Esmaeili, `this was probably the biggest cheating in all of Armenia,’
involving 400 or so fraudulent votes.

Policy Forum Armenia published the results of its preliminary analysis
on the elections, where it stated, `Our results strongly indicate that
the final outcome of [the] February 2013 election was subject to
massive manipulations and interference and did not reflect the free
will of the Armenian citizens. They also call into question the role
of foreign election observers in the Armenian context, specifically
their impartiality and ability to detect election fraud that is
becoming ever more sophisticated.’

Nazaryan says the next order of business is to declare the official
results of the Feb. 18 elections unlawful and to demand a new round of
elections, where all civil society resources will serve to guarantee a
free and fair election. `It is time for Armenia to have a legitimate
president,’ she told the Weekly, and added, `We do not recognize or
accept any heroes or saviors. We believe in and accept you alone,
citizen of the Republic of Armenia, because you are the bearer of
authority.’

***

Below is a translation of the statement read by Nazaryan during the
international observation mission press conference, as published on
CivilNet.

Dear political tourists, we have had enough of your efforts to
legitimize the fraudulent elections.

The recent presidential election in Armenia, when compared to previous
presidential elections, has registered one step forward and three
steps backwards, two steps to the right and a half step to the left.
In a word, they haven’t corresponded to the RA Constitution, to the
demands of the Election Code as well as international standards.

The elections have proceeded against the backdrop of proposed reforms
to the Election Code by the parliamentary opposition that were
rejected by the ruling majority. Even though international and
domestic observers, rights defenders and the opposition raised
concerns, especially regarding glaring inaccuracies in the voter
rolls, after the parliamentary election, nevertheless, the ruling
authorities did nothing to fix the problem before this recent
presidential election.

In essence, last year’s parliamentary election and yesterday’s
presidential election took place on the same legal-normative basis.

Of note is the fact that in the February 18 presidential election none
of Armenia’s primary political opposition forces either nominated
their own candidate or supported any of the nominated candidates. I
refer to the Armenian National Congress, Prosperous Armenia, the ARF
and the Free Democrats. This is ample proof that the election was not
truly competitive.

The fact that none of the primary opposition groups refused to
nominate their own candidate or support any other candidate running,
points to the deep level of mistrust of citizens and political forces
regarding the electoral process.

Thus, the opposition forces in the parliament, from the outset, have
labeled the presidential election as a farce and a show, since as
previously noted, the ruling majority squashed the passage of election
reforms proposed by the opposition prior to the election period.

Even though on the surface there was the appearance that important
democratic freedoms were being safeguarded during the campaign,
including the right to run a free campaign, in reality, the campaign
was noteworthy by its competitive inequality in favor of the candidate
of the regime. In particular, administrative resources and powers were
put into the service of the latter. This was accomplished via pressure
brought to bear on state and public employees to attend campaign
events of Serzh Sargsyan and to vote in his favor.

The election campaign did not proceed peacefully. Violence was
inflicted on candidate Paruyr Hayrikian. The man was shot. Another
candidate, Andreas Ghoukasyan, staged a hunger strike to protest the
electoral process which he labeled a mere show. The press covered
cases of violence even on Election Day.

The campaign also stood out by its lack of political and individual
professionalism. Candidates employed the crudest of language and
public relation stunts. For example, the various incidents that took
place during the campaign conducted by the regime’s candidate were
widely mocked by large segments of society. As a consequence, citizens
tended not to take the election process seriously.

On Election Day, polling precincts were transformed into theatrical
stages where citizens showed their attitude to the process. The press
and social internet sites were full of ballots invalidated by voters
who drew caricatures on them. They drew images of figures from the
plant and animal world, images lifted from fairy tales and television
cartoon characters. In one precinct, a voter literally ate his ballot
as a sign of protest. It significant to note that according to
official statistics, the number of invalidated ballots came in third
place.

Reports of duplicate voting, ballot stuffing, bribes, and substitute
voting and other scams were raised throughout the election itself.

Thus, yesterday’s presidential election in Armenia can be described as
yet another normal appalling election.

Dear political tourists, we’ve had enough of you legitimizing the
fraudulent election. You are trampling those democratic values that
you yourselves have broken.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/23768/the-police-warns-raffi-hovhannisyan.html

Armenian youth of France informs Parisians and tourists about falsif

Armenian youth of France informs Parisians and tourists about
falsifications of Azerbaijani propaganda

19:03 23/02/2013 » SOCIETY

“Nazarbek”, the youth organization of Social Democratic (Hnchakyan)
Party in France conducted a campaign to inform the public about
falsifications of the Azerbaijani propaganda. In one of the tourist
centers of Paris, in Montmartre, activists handed out leaflets and
flyers to tourists and those interested, which were reflecting the
real information about Aghdam events taken place in 1992, called
`Khojalu’ by the Azerbaijani side.

Today the `House of Azerbaijan’ held an action in Montmartre, in
Paris, near the Church of the Sacre Coeur by launching balloons with
the names of the victims of the events taken place in Aghdam.

On February 26, 1992, during the war in Karabakh, around 200 to 300
people (according to Human Right Watch, and 600 according to the
version propagated by Azerbaijan) were killed in unknown circumstances
near the city of Aghdam. They have been deliberately withheld by the
Azerbaijani authorities in the midst of the military actions.
Population of the village of Khojalu, which was one of the firing
points shooting at the blockaded Stepanakert (among five others) was
kept in the village for months by force and was not evacuated by the
authorities of Azerbaijan deliberately, in order to use them as human
shields later.

Residents of Khojalu coming out through the humanitarian corridor,
that the self-defense forces of NKR had left open, freely passed more
than 10 km and reached the Aghdam city controlled by the Azerbaijani
troops. Later, not far from the positions of Azerbaijani troops dead
bodies of the villagers were found. The exact death toll remains
unknown as the official Baku publishes data contradicting each other.
Parliamentary Commission investigating the tragic death of the
civilians at Aghdam city was dissolved by the order of Heydar Aliyev,
the investigative materials are kept secret.

Source: Panorama.am

`Messrs. Policemen, You Seem Sad, Don’t You? Are Your Hearts Bleedin

`Messrs. Policemen, You Seem Sad, Don’t You? Are Your Hearts Bleeding
for the OSCE?’ (Video)

February 22 2013

Activists mock police officers `What have you come to prevent our
demonstration for?’ activists resenting the reports of the OSCE/ODIHR
observers asked police officers today. Not getting an answer from the
police officers, activists started to mock them. `In order that a hair
on the OSCE uncorrupted observers’ heads is not harmed,’ one of the
activists mocked. Another one asked mockingly: `Are your hearts
bleeding for the OSCE?’ `It is not pretty, it is not; dismantle,’
added another activist. `Messrs. Policemen, you seem sad, don’t you?’
`How many citizens’ votes did you forge – 90, 80, 70?’ asked the
activists one after another. `Citizens, blocking the way is not nice,’
another activist added.

Read more at:

© 1998 – 2013 Aravot – News from Armenia

http://en.aravot.am/2013/02/22/152469/

`Or Else I Will Smash Your Face In’

`Or Else I Will Smash Your Face In’

February 23 2013

Regardless of what will come of this new wave of post-election
tension, I can surely say one thing; I will work as a journalist,
anyway. Predicting the wrath of our fundamental readers, I can also
add that it has become easier to work in our field in the past 5 years
than before. I am sure that if Raffi Hovhannisyan becomes president,
he will not restrain us either. In that sense, I sense a threat from
only one person; you know whom I mean. And although some problems
related to the freedom of speech have been solved, one problem still
remains, and I want to write about that very thing. There is a social
stratum in Armenia – criminals, semi-criminals, neighborhood
gangsters, tough guys, plug-uglies, whatever you call them the essence
is the same. Photographing those people, filming them is not that
easy; they hang out in their houses, drive their expensive Jeeps, as
well as visit the kebab diners they prefer `to grab a bite to eat.’ In
the last case, those characters may decide to record their dancing to
the songs of Hayko of Spitak, but that video will not be made public.
The only moment when that `mass’ appears in public, so to say, is the
elections; they are chairmen, secretaries, and members of commissions,
authorized persons, `people bringers,’ bribers, members of campaign
offices etc. Once or twice in five years, they should serve the
government, after which they can retire to their nests and enjoy their
kebabs. And since our elections should be a transparent process –
Europeans demand it – one can photograph them on that day. Is it
possible? It turns out that this possibility is just theoretical,
because they react to the camera in the same way as a bull to a red
cloth. It seems there’s nothing wrong; if you perform your duties
honestly and conscientiously or you are an ordinary voter, why would
you go ballistic and start to yell, `Don’t you even try to shoot me,
or else I will smash that camera against your head.’ But no, you get
angry, because you are guilty. Therefore, there are a lot of cases of
impeding the mass media when police officers naturally take sides with
the tough guys. Certainly, the prosecutor’s office, considering those
cases, `doesn’t reveal’ any corpus delicti. I propose to create a
group on Facebook called `Don’t Shoot, or Else I Will Smash Your Head
In,’ where all faces swollen due to kebabs will be uploaded, in order
that we enjoy looking at those characters every day. ARAM ABRAHAMYAN

Read more at:

© 1998 – 2013 Aravot – News from Armenia

http://en.aravot.am/2013/02/23/152485/

Military officials and Russian diplomats laid wreath to Unknown Sold

Armenian military officials and Russian diplomats laid wreath to
Unknown Soldier memorial

February 23, 2013 | 15:50

YEREVAN.- Armenian military officials and representatives of the
Russian Embassy in Yerevan laid a wreath at the memorial to the
Unknown Soldier to mark Defenders of the Fatherland Day.

Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan, Chief of Staff of the Armenian Army,
Colonel General Yuri Khachaturov, Russian Ambassador Vyacheslav
Kovalenko, representatives of the Armed Forces and the Embassy
participated in the ceremony.

The ceremony ended with a solemn march of Armenian and Russian servicemen.

On February 23 CIS states, including Armenia, celebrate Defenders of
the Fatherland Day.

http://news.am/eng/news/141728.html

Heritage party leader heads to Aparan for rally (video, photos)

Heritage party leader heads to Aparan for rally (video, photos)

TERT.AM
16:42 – 23.02.13

As part of his announced plan to launch a series of rallies in
Armenia’s regions, the opposition Heritage party’s leader met Saturday
with people of Aparan (Aragatsotn region).

Reaching the town, Raffi Hovhannisian first visited a hospital which
had Serzh Sargsyan’s pictures on its walls during the campaign. He
thanked a doctor on duty for respecting the law and removing the
incumbent president’s photos after the election.

Speaking before the crowd during the rally, the Heritage leader noted
that Aparan was the town which once helped save the first Republic of
Armenia (1918) in a fierce struggle against the Turks. `The police
will never again intimidate the people. Let no one threaten our
citizen. Aparan saved Armenia, and now it decides to once again save
the country,’ he said.

Armenia’s First President comments on opposition rallies

Armenia’s First President comments on opposition rallies

NEWS.AM
February 23, 2013 | 13:58

YEREVAN. – So far, they are only speaking, First President – and
opposition bloc Armenian National Congress leader – Levon Ter-Petrosyan
stated, during Saturday’s special convention of opposition Armenian
National Movement party.

He noted this with respect to the ongoing rallies, at capital city
Yerevan’s Liberty Square, by the supporters of opposition Heritage
Party Chairman Raffi Hovannisian – who became runner-up to the winner,
incumbent President Sargsyan, in Monday’s presidential election, but
who claims to be the real winner in the vote.

`Raffi Hovannisian did not start, the people started [these rallies];
they came to Liberty Square and are voicing their protest against
these authorities,’ Ter-Petrosyan stressed.

To the query as to whether he will join this movement, which is
likewise launched in the regions, he responded as follows:

`I always go after an action. So far, the people have come out to the
platform, the people have come to the square to voice their protest.
[But] these protesters have not yet taken action; so far, they are
only speaking. When they take action, then we will assess [the
situation], [and] if we think we should join, we will join.’

The opponent fired two thousand shots towards NKR positions

The opponent fired two thousand shots towards NKR positions

13:44, 23 February, 2013

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 23, ARMENPRESS: In accordance to Nagorno Karabakh
Republic Defense Army operative data ceasefire regime of the Line of
Contact between the armed forces of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic and
Azerbaijan has been violated over 400 times on February 17 23. In the
course of ceasefire violations more than two thousand shots from
various type of weapons were fired against Armenian peacekeepers. As
NKR Defense Army press service told Armenpress, thanks to operative
steps undertaken by Defense Army frontier units the opponent’s
activity was suspended.

Heated clashes go on in Syria’s Aleppo

Heated clashes go on in Syria’s Aleppo

TERT.AM
11:42 – 23.02.13

Syria’s largest city, Aleppo, continued facing bomb attacks throughout Friday.

Following months of violent clashes between armed opposition rebels
and the government forces, the city came under a missile attack, which
killed 12 people, including children.

Tert.am has learned from sources in Aleppo that the situation was very
tense in the vicinities of the Armenian districts, where over a dozen
of mines went off.

Heated clashes took place in the Pasha district which was formerly
home to an Armenian nursing house. The institution later moved to a
more secure area.

The noises of missiles and explosions were also heard in the Armenian
populated neighborhoods of Nor Kyugh and Villas.

Rights defenders reportedly believe that the number of victims may
increase given that the buildings which collapsed after the missile
attack still have people lying behind the rubble.

The clashes in Aleppo, Syria’s economic capital, have been continuing
since summer 2012.