YEREVAN (RFE/RL) — Armeniaâs leading opposition parties have condemned authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh for forcibly preventing dozens of members of a smaller Armenian opposition group from entering the republic as part of its campaign for âregime changeâ in Yerevan.
A motorcade of over 30 cars carrying the activists of the group called the Founding Parliament was stopped and attacked by Karabakh security forces at Armeniaâs border with the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) on Saturday. More than a dozen oppositionists, including Founding Parliament leader Zhirayr Sefilian, were injured in the violent crackdown that caused outrage among government critics in both Armenia and Karabakh.
The Founding Parliament insisted afterwards that the Karabakh riot police began beating the Yerevan-based activists and smashing their cars after Sefilian agreed to obey their orders and told the convoy to turn back. âAs soon as Zhirayr turned around to get in his car and drive back to Yerevan they started hitting him,â one of the activists, Ara Khudaverdian, told RFE/RLâs Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). âIt was like a bandit attack.â
âIt all started after they stole my camera,â said another activist, Arsen Khechoyan. He claimed that two other Founding Parliament members filming the procession also had their cameras confiscated on the spot.
The Karabakh police defended the use of force, saying that it prevented âmass disturbances.â A police statement claimed that the oppositionists would have been confronted by many angry Karabakh Armenians had they been allowed to take their campaign to the self-proclaimed republic.
A spokesman for Bako Sahakian, the NKR president, likewise justified the violence and accused the Founding Parliament of resorting to âprovocations.â âWhat is Artsakh (Karabakh) to do with internal political developments, regime change in the Republic of Armenia?â added Davit Babayan.
A 12-minute footage of the incident released by the opposition group on Sunday shows that uniformed policemen and plainclothes men deployed at an NKR checkpoint were not physically attacked before punching and kicking Founding Parliament members mostly seated in their cars. The police pummeled many cars with truncheons and broke their windshields even when they sped away from the scene. Babayan alleged that law-enforcement used force because of being verbally abused by the oppositionists.
The video, rapidly spread by Internet users, only added to an uproar in Armenia where riot police have generally exercised restraint ever since a deadly post-election unrest in 2008.
Some opposition parties claimed that the Armenian government has orchestrated such violence to neutralize popular resentment against its âshameful failings.â They also warned that Saturdayâs incident could have an âextremely negativeâ impact on Karabakhâs image abroad.
Nikol Pashinian, opposition member of parliament, decried the âmonstrous incidentâ at the start of a winter session of Armeniaâs parliament on Monday.Pashinian urged parliament speaker Galust Sahakian to form an ad hoc team of parliamentarians and send it to Stepanakert on a fact-finding mission.
Sahakian responded by pledging to discuss the matter with his Karabakh counterpart, Ashot Ghulian. âI think that relevant NKR bodies are dealing with the incident,â he said. âI will analyze that information and react to your statement.â
Some pro-government deputies made no secret of their approval of the harsh crackdown. âKarabakh is off limits to trouble-makers,â said Manvel Grigorian, a retired army general. âOnly normal citizens can go there.â
Armenian Opposition Activists Assaulted by Karabakh Police
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