Bank Of Baku

Public figures forms "human shield" between protesters and police in Yerevan

Public figures forms "human shield" between protesters and police in Yerevan
# 28 June 2015 21:37 (UTC +04:00)

Baku-APA. Police in Armenia's capital on Sunday ordered thousands of demonstrators to disperse, moving to end a protest against higher electricity rates that has blocked a main avenue in Yerevan for nearly a week, APA reports quoting Associated Press.

Police chief Vladimir Gasparian told activists in the evening on June 28 to move to the nearby Liberty Square.

Gasparian gave protesters 30 minutes to leave Baghramian Avenue, warning police would move to "restore public order" otherwise.

 

Some protesters obeyed and left for a nearby square, but thousands remained on the street after dark in defiance of both the police and the main protest organizers.

 

Riot police lined up across the road banged their truncheons against their shields in warning, but made no immediate move. Behind them stood water cannons and armored vehicles.

 

Protest organizer Vaghinak Shushanian appealed to the demonstrators on Sunday to end their standoff with police in response to a promise by the Armenian president to suspend the 17-percent rate hike pending an audit of the Russian-owned power company.

 

The unrest is the most serious that the impoverished former Soviet nation has seen in years, posing a challenge to President Serzh Sargsyan and causing great concern in Moscow. Russia maintains a military base in Armenia and Russian companies control most of its major industries.

 

After a week in which the number of protesters grew steadily to reach about 15,000, Sargsyan announced late Saturday that the government would bear the burden of the higher electricity costs until an international audit of the power company could be done. The protesters claim the Russian-owned utility is riddled with corruption.

 

Shushanian said Sunday that the president had done as much as he was able to do legally, and while it wasn't a complete victory for the demonstrators, it made sense for them to take a break. About 2,000 protesters left with him for Freedom Square.

Meanwhile, several lawmakers, showbiz representatives, and other prominent public figures came to the avenue to form a "human shield" between protesters and police.

But an estimated 6,000 remained on the street, whistling and jeering as they faced off against police. Some chanted "For a free and independent Armenia" and waved Armenian flags. On previous evenings, the protesters, most of whom are young, cheerfully danced and sang in a celebration of national unity. On Sunday, the mood was far more tense.

 

Shortly after the protesters first blocked the avenue on June 22, riot police used water cannons to disperse them with force, but this only increased their numbers and brought international condemnation. In the days following, regular police stood by peacefully, but on Sunday evening the riot police returned in full gear.

 

Yerevan's deputy police chief told the protesters that the president's announcement meant they had won.

 

Demonstrators said that they will not leave the avenue until Sarkisian announces the cancellation of the tariffs on national television.

They also want punishment for the police officers who beat activists and journalists in a violent breakup of June 23 protests.

 

 

1 2 3 4 5 İDMAN XƏBƏR
#
#

THE OPERATION IS BEING PERFORMED