Restrictions: Music may be subject to copyright
Hundreds of Armenians gathered for a new rally against current Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan on Tuesday, where they called for his resignation.
”It is not about legitimacy or illegitimacy [of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan]. There are two sides of the so-called conflict: on the one side there is Armenian folk, on the other - Pashinyan’s junta, traitors, that lead our country to such a state, destroyed most of the institutions and signed such a horrible, shameful document,” stated leader of the youth movement of the Republican Party of Armenia Hayk Mamidzhanyan.
The protesters also headed towards the Special Investigation Service building, where they announced their demands and then left the area. A police presence observed the demonstrators at the rally.
Nikol Pashinyan has announced that he was ready to hold early parliamentary elections in 2021 and leave his post "only by the people's decision."
Protests in Yerevan broke out after Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a Russian-brokered deal to end the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh on November 9. As per the trilateral agreement, a number of Nagorno-Karabakh districts came under the control of Baku. The unrest in Yerevan resumed after Prime Minister Pashinyan rejected the call by the opposition to step down by December 8.
Hundreds of Armenians gathered for a new rally against current Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan on Tuesday, where they called for his resignation.
”It is not about legitimacy or illegitimacy [of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan]. There are two sides of the so-called conflict: on the one side there is Armenian folk, on the other - Pashinyan’s junta, traitors, that lead our country to such a state, destroyed most of the institutions and signed such a horrible, shameful document,” stated leader of the youth movement of the Republican Party of Armenia Hayk Mamidzhanyan.
The protesters also headed towards the Special Investigation Service building, where they announced their demands and then left the area. A police presence observed the demonstrators at the rally.
Nikol Pashinyan has announced that he was ready to hold early parliamentary elections in 2021 and leave his post "only by the people's decision."
Protests in Yerevan broke out after Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a Russian-brokered deal to end the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh on November 9. As per the trilateral agreement, a number of Nagorno-Karabakh districts came under the control of Baku. The unrest in Yerevan resumed after Prime Minister Pashinyan rejected the call by the opposition to step down by December 8.
Restrictions: Music may be subject to copyright
Hundreds of Armenians gathered for a new rally against current Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan on Tuesday, where they called for his resignation.
”It is not about legitimacy or illegitimacy [of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan]. There are two sides of the so-called conflict: on the one side there is Armenian folk, on the other - Pashinyan’s junta, traitors, that lead our country to such a state, destroyed most of the institutions and signed such a horrible, shameful document,” stated leader of the youth movement of the Republican Party of Armenia Hayk Mamidzhanyan.
The protesters also headed towards the Special Investigation Service building, where they announced their demands and then left the area. A police presence observed the demonstrators at the rally.
Nikol Pashinyan has announced that he was ready to hold early parliamentary elections in 2021 and leave his post "only by the people's decision."
Protests in Yerevan broke out after Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a Russian-brokered deal to end the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh on November 9. As per the trilateral agreement, a number of Nagorno-Karabakh districts came under the control of Baku. The unrest in Yerevan resumed after Prime Minister Pashinyan rejected the call by the opposition to step down by December 8.