
Published on March 14, 2008
ARMENIAN OPPOSITIONISTS ‘TORTURED IN JAIL’
- The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights on Friday called for an independent investigation into Armenia’s deadly post-election unrest and said opposition supporters arrested by the authorities in recent weeks have been ill-treated in custody. Thomas Hammarberg spent the past three days meeting government and opposition leaders in Yerevan and visiting hospitals that have treated scores of people injured in the March 1 clashes between riot police and supporters of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian. He was also allowed to visit some of more than 100 Ter-Petrosian loyalists arrested on a string of charges mainly relating to those clashes. “There have been cases where there were problems,” Hammarberg said of his meetings in Armenian prisons. “Some of those arrested have been beaten, which of course is not acceptable.” “Several of those I have talked to in prison feel that they are absolutely innocent and that they only expressed only their opinions,” he told RFE/RL before returning to Strasbourg. Hammarberg stopped short of describing any of the detainees as political prisoners, saying only that he urged President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian to limit the ongoing prosecutions only to “those cases where there is real proof that people have committed violent crimes.” “It is important now to avoid any tendency towards bringing in people because of their political positions,” he said. Kocharian, Sarkisian and Armenia’s top law-enforcement officials deny any political motives behind the mass arrests which they say were needed for thwarting a coup d’etat allegedly plotted by Ter-Petrosian and his top allies. The authorities say the use of force against thousands of opposition supporters who demonstrated in Yerevan against the official results of Armenia’s disputed presidential election was therefore justified. At least seven protesters and one security officer were killed as a result. Hammarberg appeared to have serious misgivings about the official version of events, echoing the European Union’s calls for an independent investigation into the worst street violence in the country’s history. “I really think that there is a need for a professional, independent and impartial inquiry into what happened,” he said, adding that it should be conducted by special commission made up of individuals “trusted by the public.” In Hammarberg’s words, international experts could also assist in the conduct of the probe. “That inquiry is so important for Armenia,” he said. The Council of Europe official said he also told Kocharian and Sarkisian that the recent day’s easing of civil liberty restrictions stemming from the state of emergency in Yerevan is “not sufficient” and specifically urged them to abolish “censorship” of the Armenian media. He said that is important for defusing the post-election tensions in Armenia. “There are real problems in Armenia today,” said Hammarberg. “The society is divided. There is polarization.” (Photolur photo)

Discussion
Henry wrote:
Well,
it is a dictatorship afterall.
Philip Karayan wrote:
Henry, I fully agree and must add that this is one of the worst brutal dictatorships in our history.
Headlines for March 14, 2008
ARMENIAN MEDIA BAN STILL IN FORCE
Armenia’s leading newspapers critical of the government were unable to resume publication on Friday despite a softening of the controversial government ban on independent news reporting announced by President ...SARKISIAN RULES OUT JOB SWAP WITH KOCHARIAN
3
President Robert Kocharian will not after all become Armenia’s prime minister after completing his second and final term in office early next month, Prime Minister and President-elect Serzh Sarkisian ...ARMENIAN OPPOSITIONISTS ‘TORTURED IN JAIL’
2
The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights on Friday called for an independent investigation into Armenia’s deadly post-election unrest and said opposition supporters arrested by the authorities ...OSKANIAN MEETS KARABAKH MEDIATORS
2
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian met international mediators in Vienna to discuss ways of kick-starting the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and, in particular, organizing a fresh Armenian-Azerbaijani summit, ...
Similar headlines for (last 7 days) new!
OPPOSITION LEADERS FREED, TRIED
By Ruzanna Stepanian, Anush Martirosian and Karine Kalantarian
Most read news (last 7 days)
ARMENIAN COURT REJECTS TER-PETROSIAN ELECTION APPEAL

MORE OPPOSITION LEADERS ARRESTED

TER-PETROSIAN VOWS MORE PROTESTS

ARMENIANS ‘HYPNOTIZED BY TER-PETROSIAN’

ARMENIAN OPPOSITIONISTS ‘TORTURED IN JAIL’

WOMEN DEMONSTRATE IN YEREVAN

SARKISIAN RULES OUT JOB SWAP WITH KOCHARIAN

U.S. OFFICIAL SLAMS YEREVAN FOR ‘BRUTAL’ CRACKDOWN
FUGITIVE OPPOSITION MP ARRESTED

RUSSIA URGES ‘DIALOGUE’ BETWEEN ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT, OPPOSITION
© AUA
Today in Armenian history- 1884 Birth in Batoom of Levon Takhtajian, lecturer of Yerevan State University (agricultural economy and linguistics).
- 1901 Birth of Kostandeen Hakobian, Scientist, Doctor and Professor of Agricultural Sciences, in Meerzeek. He got a State Award for the creation of a Kazakh species of white-headed cattle.
- 1914 Birth of Balasan (Vruyr Balasanyan), translator and writer, in Moscow, .
- 1918 Start of the Trebizond negotiations between the delegations of Turkey and the Transcaucasian Seym. The German-Turkish attack took place at the same time. The negotiation effort was in vain as the Mensheviks, led by Chkhenkely, agreed to cede to the territorial demands of Turkey.
- 1921 Start of the Red Army's extensive attack on Yerevan, which ended in its victory two weeks later.
- 1921 End of the London Conference. It made indefinite allusions to a national home for the Armenians in Western Armenia. The Turkish part rejected it later.
Forum most active discussions
ARMENIAN NEWS
INTERACTIVE NEWS
INFORMATION
MY ARMTOWN

How to quit smoking?
How to write in Armenian on Windows XP?

