The Borneo Post

Armenian leader dismisses FM amid protests over peace deal

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YEREVAN: Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Monday dismissed his foreign minister as several thousand demonstrat­ors staged a new rally against a controvers­ial peace deal with Azerbaijan.

Last week Pashinyan announced a Russian-brokered deal that ended six weeks of fierce clashes with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh that left thousands dead and displaced tens of thousands more.

Armenia agreed to cede swathes of the disputed region to Baku, as well as other territorie­s controlled by Armenian separatist­s since a devastatin­g war in the 1990s.

The deal sparked fury in Armenia, where thousands of protesters took to the streets of the capital Yerevan, calling Pashinyan a “traitor” and demanding his resignatio­n. Protesters also stormed and ransacked government buildings.

Pashinyan has ruled out his own resignatio­n, but on Monday he announced that he had “decided to fire” Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakany­an.

Several thousand opposition supporters gathered for a new rally in Yerevan on Monday, with many chanting “Nikol leave” and “Nikol the traitor.”

Opposition politician Eduard Sharmazano­v said that “even one more hour” of Pashinyan’s rule was a threat to Armenia’s security.

“We can only discuss with him one subject: his resignatio­n,” Sharmazano­v said at the rally.

Pashinyan, whose wife and son were at the front during the conflict, has so far weathered the political storm despite the pressure.

Speaking to lawmakers in parliament on Monday, Pashinyan pointed to continued support from Armenia’s military and ethnic Armenian separatist­s in Karabakh.

He also reiterated that the peace accord was Armenia’s only option and that it ensured Nagorno-Karabakh’s survival.

Even though the disputed region lost swathes of territory, it will see its future guaranteed by some 2,000 Russian peacekeepe­rs to be deployed for an initial period of five years.

Earlier in the day Pashinyan appealed for calm as he spoke to supporters on social media.

“Today I clearly stated that violence or the provoking of violence (especially armed violence) cannot in any way be a means of action for the government,” Pashinyan said on Facebook.

He added that he expected the opposition to also declare that it did not back “any violent action”.

Authoritie­s on Saturday said they thwarted a plot to assassinat­e the 45-year-old prime minister and arrested opposition leader Artur Vanetsyan, the former head of Armenia’s security services.

Vanetsyan, leader of the centrerigh­t “Homeland” party, was released on Sunday after a court ruled that his detention lacked legal grounds. A dozen opposition leaders were detained last week for inciting riots but were also released.

Nagorno-Karabakh declared independen­ce from Azerbaijan nearly 30 years ago but it has not been recognised internatio­nally, even by Armenia.

Clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenian separatist­s broke out in late September and persisted despite efforts by France, Russia and the United States to mediate ceasefires that collapsed as each side accused the other of violations.

 ?? Photo — AFP file ?? General view of destroyed Azerbaijan­i houses after Amenia captured the district in 1994, in the town of Kalbajar during the military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Photo — AFP file General view of destroyed Azerbaijan­i houses after Amenia captured the district in 1994, in the town of Kalbajar during the military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

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