12 More Armenians Indicted Over Antigovernment Protests
The Investigative Committee said on Monday that one of the suspects was charged with participating in “mass disturbances.” The others are facing accusations of “hooliganism committed in a group” against police officers. The committee indicated that it may well prosecute more supporters Archbishop Bagrat Galstanian, the leader of the more than month-long antigovernment protests.
The law-enforcement agency indicted the 12 men just as it freed without charge all 28 protesters who were arrested on Wednesday on a street adjacent to the Armenian parliament building heavily guarded by security forces. Thousands of Galstanian supporters gathered there as Pashinian answered questions from parliamentarians.
During scuffles that broke out there, security forces hurled dozens of stun grenades into the dense crowd, injuring at least 83 people who required medical aid in hospitals. According to law-enforcement authorities, 18 policemen were also hurt.
Pashinian and his allies have unequivocally defended the police actions, claiming that the protesters tried to break through the police cordons to storm the parliament. These claims are rejected not only by Galstanian and the Armenian opposition forces but also local civic organizations.
In a joint statement issued on Monday, 17 mostly Western-funded NGOs strongly condemned the police actions as “unnecessary, disproportionate and therefore illegal” and demanded a criminal investigation into them. They were especially outraged by the unprecedented number of stun grenades used in the crackdown.
Natalia Nozadze, Amnesty International’s South Caucasus researcher, likewise expressed serious concern about “the level of violence during the latest street rally in Yerevan”
“We call on the Armenian authorities to immediately and impartially investigate what happened, including allegations that the police may have used unnecessary or excessive force,” she said.
“Law enforcement officials should avoid the use of force; where this is not possible, force should only be used when it is absolutely necessary and proportionate to achieve a legitimate law enforcement objective, and to the minimum extent necessary,”
Ruben Melikian, an opposition-linked lawyer representing one of the indicted suspects, said that the authorities are pressing politically motivated charges against protesters in order to justify the use of force. He insisted that the charges are based on policemen’s incriminating testimony that cannot be corroborated by any evidence.
“Look at the testimony of those ‘victims,’” Melikian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “One of the policemen said, ‘I had a back pain, went to doctor and they said everything is alright.’ Another said, ‘An empty plastic bottle hit my helmet and I felt dizzy.’”
Melikian’s client, Tigran Saribekian, is now under house arrest. According to the lawyer, Saribekian threw a wooden object towards several lines of riot police after being injured in a stun grenade explosion.
The latest indictments raised to 59 the total number of Galstanian supporters prosecuted since the start of the antigovernment protests in late April. Twenty-nine of them are held in pre-trial detention.