Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Antigovernment Protests Restart In Armenia



The Guardian: Armenian protesters take to streets again as talks break down

Supporters of Nikol Pashinyan gather in Republic Square after forcing PM’s resignation.

Opposition protests have resumed in the Armenian capital after talks broke down between the ruling Republican party and the opposition, forcing the prime minister, Serzh Sargsyan, to resign on Monday.

Thousands of people descended on Republic Square in the capital, Yerevan, on Wednesday morning after a call from the opposition leader, Nikol Pashinyan, to return to the streets until the government agreed to a transition of power.

Drivers beeped their horns in support of the demonstrations and opponents of the government shouted demands for an election.

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WNU Editor: The ruling party wants new elections. The opposition leading these protests want a transfer of power. There is no common ground between the two sides.

More News On The Growing Unrest In Armenia

Armenian opposition bloc to nominate protest leader Pashinyan as PM -- Reuters
Thousands Protest in Armenia as Political Talks Called Off -- US News and World Report/AP
Tens of thousands protest as Armenia crisis deepens -- AFP
Protests Erupt Anew in Armenia Amid Political Deadlock -- New York Times
Armenians protest as acting leader suggests new elections -- Reuters
Armenian Party Quits Ruling Coalition As Pashinian Leads New Protests -- RFE
Armenian Opposition to Boycott Election to Prevent Acting PM From Keeping Power -- Sputnik
Mass protests grip Armenian capital despite PM Sargsyan’s resignation (PHOTOS, VIDEO) -- RT
Protest Actions in Armenia Spread Across Center of Yerevan (VIDEO, PHOTO) -- Sputnik
Political scientist says opposition MP Pashinyan, supporters are not ready for snap elections proposed by acting PM -- Armen Press

1 comment:

someone said...

I wonder what Moscow thinks of this?So far the protests have not in any way implied opposition to Moscow but it wouldn't be out of the realm of possibility especially if they escalate.And if that happens how will Moscow react?