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Karen Andreasian (file photo)
Karen Andreasian (file photo)
YEREVAN -- Armenia's human rights ombudsman has condemned as illegal the controversial closure of kiosks in Yerevan ordered by the mayor, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reports.

In a written statement, Karen Andreasian on August 16 accused city officials and riot police of committing "blatant violations of human rights" during the forcible dismantling last week of several such small shops located on a street in the city's northern Arabkir district.

The police used force to overcome resistance from the kiosk's angry owners on August 10. The resulting public uproar led Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian to demand explanations from Mayor Karen Karapetian at a meeting of his cabinet held the next day.

Karapetian said the city authorities were only dismantling those businesses that lack valid government licenses or were located on "central streets" and "interfere with the normal work of the city."

Andreasian insisted that many of the kiosk retailers who have received closure notices from the mayor's office legally own their commercial space. Attempts to strip them of their property are a serious violation of the constitution and state laws, he said.

Andreasian added that "furthermore, facts at our disposal show that during those inadequate actions police officers used violence against women present at the scene."

City workers dismantle a kiosk in Yerevan on August 10.
Andreasian told RFE/RL the municipal administration must stop demolishing legal kiosks. "All dismantled kiosks that operated legally must be restored or their owners must receive adequate compensation," he said.

The ombudsman also called for government assistance to kiosk owners that lack official documents certifying the legality of their business.

Karapetian's office could not be reached for comment.

The police, for their part, said they were looking into the matter. A spokesman told RFE/RL that police chief Alik Sarkisian had ordered his subordinates to "clarify the mentioned circumstances."

Also raising questions about the legality of the kiosk closures is the fact that Karapetian issued his controversial order earlier this year orally. Some lawyers say this constitutes a serious violation of property rights guaranteed by law.

Both Karapetian and Sarkisian said last week that the several thousand kiosks operating in Yerevan would not be shut down en masse. "There will be individual approaches and kiosks will be dismantled only in case of extreme necessity, if they don't create problems for the municipal infrastructure," Sarkisian said.

Nevertheless, several dozen small shopkeepers gathered outside President Serzh Sarkisian's office on August 16 to condemn the mayor's actions and appeal for the president's intervention.

Some of the protesters were received by Hovannes Hovsepian, chief of the presidential Oversight Service. One of them told RFE/RL that Hovsepian defended the kiosk closures.

"He said that he personally agreed with the mayor, that the city must be tidied up and look nice, that the kiosks hamper that," said the woman, who did not want to be identified.

"To our question about how the kiosks owners are to live now...he replied that the city's appearance is more important," she said.

Read more in Armenian here
Kazakh Protesters Arrested
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WATCH: (In Kazakh) Protesters Zhanna Baitelova, Arman Ozhaubaev, and Dmitry Tikhonov are detained for picketing the offices of the ruling Nur-Otan party on August 17. They wore T-shirts with the striking oil workers' demands printed on them and had chains around their necks.

ALMATY, Kazakhstan -- Three Kazakh activists have been detained for holding a protest demanding the release from jail of a labor lawyer who acted for striking oil workers, RFE/RL's Kazakh Service reports.

The three -- Zhanna Baitelova, Arman Ozhaubaev, and Dmitry Tikhonov from Kazakhstan's Socialist Movement -- were detained for picketing the offices of the ruling Nur-Otan party on August 17.

Natalya Sokolova, who represented striking oil workers in western Kazakhstan, was jailed for six years last week for "igniting social hatred."

The activists wore T-shirts with the striking oil workers' demands printed on them and had chains around their necks.

Police took them to Almaty's Almaly district police station and charged them with "holding an unsanctioned public gathering."

Baitelova told RFE/RL that there was a chance that she and her colleagues would appear in court later on August 17.

Natalya Sokolova, seen here in a late July court appearance and who represented striking oil workers in western Kazakhstan, was jailed for six years for "igniting social hatred."


Thousands of oil workers in Kazakhstan's western Manghystau region have been on strike since May to demand a pay raise, the lifting on restrictions on the activities of independent trade unions in the region, Sokolova's release, and equal rights with foreign workers.

Read more in Kazakh here

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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