Protesters, Police Clash Outside Armenian Parliament
Riot police fired stun grenades outside the Armenian parliament on Wednesday as they clashed with protesters continuing to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation.
Addressing the crowd before the session, Galstanian demanded that Pashinian meet him to discuss “the terms of his peaceful departure.” He again accused Pashinian of misrule and “surrender of the homeland,” urging the protesters to prevent him from leaving the building.
“The man who failed the state must not be able to freely go to work, cynically ignore the pain caused to our people because of him,” declared Galstanian. He repeatedly urged more people to join the protests in the following hours.
Pashinian rejected the demands for his resignation and lambasted Armenia’s opposition groups supporting the protest movement sparked by his territorial concessions to Azerbaijan.
The protesters did not manage to surround the vast compound guarded by scores of police officers from across Armenia as well as armed officers of the National Security Service. At least 60 of them were detained by the police before tensions at the protest site rose dramatically in the evening.
The chief of the Armenian police, Aram Hovannisian, defended the use of stun grenades, saying that “the situation was out of control.” Pashinian also defended the police actions.
Galstanian blamed the violence on “police provocations.” He urged the crowd to stay put and continue the protest.
Pashinian was apparently not inside the main government building when protesters led by Galstanian marched to it late in the evening. Galstanian urged supporters to gather there again during a cabinet meeting scheduled for Thursday morning.
“He [Pashinian] must remain on the run in the coming days,” said the protest leader.