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Breaking News: Police forces deployed to Republic Square, protesters being detained, NIkol Pashinyan arrested

April 22, 2018 By administrator

YEREVAN. – The situation is tense at Republic Square, the central square in Yerevan.

A large number of police forces have been deployed to the square, numerous activists are being detained.

Protesters are marching along the streets and are divided in three large groups.

Earlier in the day protesters and police clashed on Artsakh Street in Erebuni district. Police used special means and took away MPs NIkol Pashinyan, Sasun Mikaelyan and Ararat Mirzoyan. Numerous activists were detained in Erebuni district.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenai, Police forces deployed

Russia warns against ‘colour revolution’ in Armenia #ElectricYerevan

July 2, 2015 By administrator

By Timothy Heritage and Hasmik Mkrtchyan

  REUTERS/Narek Aleksanyan/PAN Photo

REUTERS/Narek Aleksanyan/PAN Photo

MOSCOW/YEREVAN (Reuters) – In a veiled warning to the West, Russia cautioned on Thursday against any attempt to spark a new “colour revolution” in Armenia by exploiting protests against electricity prices for political ends.

Large crowds of mostly young people have been protesting in the Armenian capital Yerevan for more than 10 days, demanding the government scrap plans to raise the price of electricity for households.

Russia has been wary of unrest on its borders since governments fell in Georgia’s 2003 Rose Revolution, Ukraine’s 2003-04 Orange Revolution and Kiev’s 2014 Maidan protests – events in which it says the West backed the protesters.

“You know how the ‘colour revolutions’, and the Maidan in Ukraine, started,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said at a BRICS Youth Summit gathering of young people from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) in Moscow.

“The current developments in Armenia – there is also a temptation among many to use them to whip up anti-government sentiment although the root of these events is purely economic,” Interfax news agency quoted him as saying.

“It seems useful for someone to go further and develop these processes in a political way.”

Lavrov said that the West in particular was paying increasing attention to the role of young people in shaping national agendas, including through “peaceful protest”.

His comments were the closest any senior Russian official has come to suggesting the West may have or be seeking a role in the protest in Armenia, which hosts a Russian military base, to pull it further out of Moscow’s orbit.

FEAR OF COLOUR REVOLUTION

Thousands of protesters have been gathering every evening in Yerevan though their numbers dwindle during the day. Police tried to disperse them with water cannon early last week but the protest continued and has been peaceful since then.

The protesters have ignored concessions offered by President Serzh Sargsyan, saying they want the price rise of up to 22 percent planned by the distribution company, a subsidiary of Russian firm Inter RAO, to be scrapped entirely.

The protesters have avoided chanting anti-government slogans, saying their demands are limited to the electricity price dispute, though many also complain about alleged corruption in Armenia.

“I think the process of these protests is largely over – or if not over, heading that way,” Armenian political analyst Alexander Iskandaryan told Reuters in Yerevan.

But Russian leaders fear unrest in neighbouring states could encourage protests in Russia and President Vladimir Putin said last year that Moscow “should do everything necessary” to prevent such a “colour revolution” in Russia.

Armenia, in the southern Caucasus, was once part of the Soviet Union and its 3.2 million people have been hit hard by an economic downturn in Russia, its main ally and trading partner.

It is also part of the Eurasian Economic Union, a political and economic bloc set up by Moscow to try to match the economic strength of the European Union, China and the United States.

The Kremlin has said it is up to Armenia’s government and the protesters to resolve the dispute themselves.

(Additional reporting Margarita Antidze in Tbilisi; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Armenai, colour, Protest, revolution, Russia

Turkish columnist: Genocide recognitions further isolate Turkey

April 26, 2015 By administrator

Serkan-55By SERKAN DEMİRTAŞ

In a comprehensive interview with daily Hürriyet’s Cansu Çamlıbel on April 24, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan underlined in an open way that Armenia’s “struggle does not end in 2015 – it will just enter a more mature phase.”

“Let us not forget that we have had an opportunity to raise the issue of the Armenian Genocide and condemn it only after the declaration of independence of the third Republic of Armenia. And that means that our struggle has just started. And it will be more coordinated and purposeful in the upcoming years,” he told Hürriyet on the occasion of the centennial commemoration of the mass killings of his ancestors at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

A years-long vigorous and aggressive campaign by the Armenian state and the Armenian diaspora to get the genocide recognized by more countries yielded important results in 2015. Pope Francis kicked off the flare by describing the 1915 incidents as genocide, in an obvious message delivered to the entire Catholic World. The European Parliament, the Austrian Parliament, German President Joachim Gauck and Russian President Vladimir Putin among many others lined up to express the “G-word,” at the expense of drawing Turkey’s reaction. The Russian Duma and the German Bundestag were still debating over resolutions for the recognition of the genocide late afternoon on April 24 when this column was being written.

U.S. President Barack Obama preferred to avoid using “genocide” to describe the 1915 incidents, but it should not be forgotten that he still has nearly two years left in office and that he may find another opportunity to call this atrocity a genocide. It should be well understood that Obama did not refrain from using this word because of the potential Turkish reaction but because of existing interests of his country. From now until the end of his mandate, Obama could announce that he describes the 1915 incidents as genocide either verbally or through a statement.

This overall picture tells so many things at the same time. First of all, it has been revealed that Turkey failed to counter the Armenian campaign diplomatically, politically and scientifically. Turkey’s sole strategy was to move the centennial commemoration of the Gallipoli Battle to April 24 in a move to distract attention from Yerevan.

Turkey’s weak and outdated campaign has produced nothing but more anti-Western rhetoric, which pushed more countries to recognize the genocide.

Turkey has withdrawn ambassadors from Austria and the Vatican and likely will from Germany and Russia as well if these countries’ parliaments recognize the genocide. With the European Parliament already voting in favor of a similar resolution, it would not be a surprise to observe another cold era in Ankara’s ties with the EU. Most EU countries are now listed among countries that have labeled the 1915 incidents as genocide and this would create more obstacles in front of Turkey’s full membership negotiations with Brussels. If this situation worsens, the risk of the EU putting the recognition of genocide as a condition before full Turkish membership will grow.

On the Russian front, the situation is no less complicated. Putin’s statement on the occasion of the 1915 incidents was not expected to be that strong given the deepening economic and energy cooperation between Ankara and Moscow. In a recent visit to Kazakhstan, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan went so far that he has shown interest in partnership with the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union, an international organization composed of Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Armenia. It seems Erdoğan is in a full political abyss, as he forgets that it was Putin’s ambition to increase his influence in the region by keeping NATO and the EU out of its area of dominance that kicked off the Ukraine crisis and the annexation of Crimea by Russia.

The scope and tone of the Turkish reaction against Russia will provide evidence on whether Erdoğan will continue his inconsistency in dealing with Turkey’s northern neighbor. One of the most important indicators would perhaps be the future of the Turkish Stream, a pipeline that would carry Russian gas to Europe via Turkey.

This year’s struggle between Turkey and Armenia also reduces the chances for a breakthrough on the Nagorno-Karabakh problem between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu criticized the Russian and French presidents for attending the centennial commemoration ceremonies in Yerevan but he preferred to highlight their role in the Minsk Group, set by three co-chairs, France, Russia and the U.S., to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.

“Russia’s and France’s presence in Yerevan casts a shadow over the impartiality of the Minsk Group as well. Necessary diplomatic initiatives are being taken about them too,” Davutoğlu said. Instead of issuing a direct criticism on Putin and French President Francois Hollande, Davutoğlu preferred to reflect it on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, implying that the breakthrough on this already frozen conflict will be more difficult.

To make the long story short, this campaign being carried out by Armenia has put Turkey’s image abroad into a more difficult state and put Turkey’s ties with the Western world into dire straits that can cause more isolation.

April/25/2015

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenai, Genocide, isolated, Recognition, Turkey

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