This website uses cookies. Some are necessary to help our website work properly and can't be switched off, and some are optional but can optimise your browsing experience. To manage your cookie choices, click on Open settings.
Armenia: Yerevan police guard perimeter around parliament during protest٠٠:٠١:٠٦
Top downloads in last 24 hours
Show more
Description

Police in riot gear lined up across streets near the Armenian parliament, on Wednesday, as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was expected to take part in a government meeting while opposition supporters rallied in front of the building.

Footage shows protesters and police near the parliament as well as armed soldiers in the yard of the building. Snipers were seen sitting at windows, while the surroundings were reportedly enforced with flashing grenades.

The press service of the Armenian president earlier reported that President Armen Sargsyan discussed the domestic political situation with the Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Colonel-General Onik Gasparyan, who Pashinyan wants to be fired.

Protests against Pashinyan flared up again last week after a group of military officers wrote a letter asking the prime minister to step down.

Despite the renewed pressure, Pashinyan has refused to resign, calling the letter an 'attempted coup' and tried to remove the chief of the General Staff from office.

According to the president's press service, Sargsyan did not sign Pashinyan's order and returned the document to the prime minister.

Anti-Pashinyan protests originally began in November of last year after he signed the Russian-brokered deal to end fighting between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Under the terms of the trilateral agreement, a number of Nagorno-Karabakh districts have officially handed control over to Azerbaijan.

Armenia: Yerevan police guard perimeter around parliament during protest

Armenia, Yerevan
مارس ٣, ٢٠٢١ at ١٦:٢٣ GMT +00:00 · Published

Police in riot gear lined up across streets near the Armenian parliament, on Wednesday, as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was expected to take part in a government meeting while opposition supporters rallied in front of the building.

Footage shows protesters and police near the parliament as well as armed soldiers in the yard of the building. Snipers were seen sitting at windows, while the surroundings were reportedly enforced with flashing grenades.

The press service of the Armenian president earlier reported that President Armen Sargsyan discussed the domestic political situation with the Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Colonel-General Onik Gasparyan, who Pashinyan wants to be fired.

Protests against Pashinyan flared up again last week after a group of military officers wrote a letter asking the prime minister to step down.

Despite the renewed pressure, Pashinyan has refused to resign, calling the letter an 'attempted coup' and tried to remove the chief of the General Staff from office.

According to the president's press service, Sargsyan did not sign Pashinyan's order and returned the document to the prime minister.

Anti-Pashinyan protests originally began in November of last year after he signed the Russian-brokered deal to end fighting between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Under the terms of the trilateral agreement, a number of Nagorno-Karabakh districts have officially handed control over to Azerbaijan.

Description

Police in riot gear lined up across streets near the Armenian parliament, on Wednesday, as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was expected to take part in a government meeting while opposition supporters rallied in front of the building.

Footage shows protesters and police near the parliament as well as armed soldiers in the yard of the building. Snipers were seen sitting at windows, while the surroundings were reportedly enforced with flashing grenades.

The press service of the Armenian president earlier reported that President Armen Sargsyan discussed the domestic political situation with the Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Colonel-General Onik Gasparyan, who Pashinyan wants to be fired.

Protests against Pashinyan flared up again last week after a group of military officers wrote a letter asking the prime minister to step down.

Despite the renewed pressure, Pashinyan has refused to resign, calling the letter an 'attempted coup' and tried to remove the chief of the General Staff from office.

According to the president's press service, Sargsyan did not sign Pashinyan's order and returned the document to the prime minister.

Anti-Pashinyan protests originally began in November of last year after he signed the Russian-brokered deal to end fighting between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Under the terms of the trilateral agreement, a number of Nagorno-Karabakh districts have officially handed control over to Azerbaijan.

Top downloads in last 24 hours
Show more