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2008 Armenian election protests

2008 Armenian presidential election protests
2008 Armenian protests collage.jpg
Protests at Freedom Square on 24 February, tents set up by protesters, demonstrations at Myasnikyan Square on 1 March. Police forces occupying the Freedom Square weeks after the forcible suppression on 23 March.
Date 20 February – 2 March 2008 (11 days)
Location Yerevan, Armenia
Caused by Alleged electoral fraud
Goals New elections
Methods Protest, Sit-in, Demonstration
Resulted in

Peaceful protests suppressed by force

  • 10 people killed
  • 20-day state of emergency declared
  • Media blackout
  • Freedom Square closed for protesters until 17 March 2011
  • Over 100 opposition activists arrested until mid-2011
Parties to the civil conflict

United opposition

Lead figures
Robert Kocharyan (incumbent president)
Serzh Sargsyan (Prime Minister, president-elect)
Mikael Harutyunyan (Defence Minister)
Seyran Ohanyan (Chief of General Sraff)
Gorik Hakobyan (Head of the NSS)
(Head of the police)
Number
100,000+
up to few thousand policemen/soldiers
Casualties
Death(s) 10 (8 protesters, 1 policeman, 1 soldier)
Injuries 200
Arrested 106
7 shops looted
63 vehicles set on fire

Peaceful protests suppressed by force

United opposition

Armenian government

Ruling parties:

A series of mass protests were held in Armenia in the wake of the Armenian presidential election of 19 February 2008. Mass protests against alleged electoral fraud were held in the capital city of Yerevan and organised by supporters of the unsuccessful presidential candidate and first President of the Republic of Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrosyan.

The protests began on 20 February, lasted for 10 days in Yerevan's Freedom Square, and involved tens of thousands of demonstrators during the day and hundreds camping out overnight. After nine days of peaceful protests at the Freedom Square, the national police and military forces tried to disperse the protesters on 1 March. As a result, 10 people were killed. Despite the urges of the government to stop the demonstrations, the protests continued until 1 March. On the morning of 1 March, police and army units dispersed the 700–1,000 persons who remained overnight, beating them with truncheons and electric-shock devices. As of 4 March, many protesters are still missing. On 1 March, Ter-Petrosyan was placed under de facto house arrest.

At noon on 1 March, a crowd of at least 10,000 protesters held a rally in front of the French embassy. Police officers pulled away from the area by 16:00, as they were overwhelmed by the growing number of demonstrators. Activists then used abandoned police buses to set up barricades. In the evening, clashes broke out between riot police and about 2,000 protesters who barricaded themselves at Miasnikyan Square. At around 22:00, President Robert Kocharyan, with the approval of the Armenian parliament, declared a 20-day state of emergency, banning future demonstrations and censoring the media from broadcasting any political news except those issued by official state press releases. Kocharian justified the decision on the grounds that a minority of demonstrators looted a nearby grocery store on Mashtots Avenue and set fire to a handful of police vehicles and buses (while the riot police, special forces and army looked on from 1 km away from Shahumyan Square without intervening). Opposition leaders say that the looters had nothing to do with the demonstration, and that they were led by agent provocateurs. With the state of emergency in effect, at around 4:00 on 2 March, Levon Ter-Petrosyan asked the protesters near the French Embassy to go home, thus ending the protests.


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Wikipedia

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