Al Jazeera News :
Opposition demonstrators have blocked the streets of Armenia’s capital to mark the start of a protest campaign after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan ignored their call to step down over a ceasefire deal struck with Azerbaijan.
Chanting “Nikol, traitor,” and “Armenia without Nikol,” hundreds filled the streets of Yerevan, answering an opposition call to protest after Pashinyan ignored a deadline of midday Tuesday set by the opposition for him to quit.
Pashinyan, who swept to power in a peaceful revolution in May 2018, accepted a Russian-brokered ceasefire deal last month to end a bloody conflict between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over the Nagorno-Karabakh region and surrounding areas.
Pashinyan’s opponents want him out over what they say was his disastrous handling of the six-week conflict that handed Azerbaijan territorial gains.
Pashinyan has accepted responsibility for the conflict’s outcome but said he is now responsible for ensuring national security and stabilising the ex-Soviet republic of approximately three million people.
Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an opposition politician for the Armenian Revolutionary Federation party, announced the start of coordinated civil disobedience in a televised address on Tuesday after the deadline passed.
“Nikol, you will go anyway. Leave peacefully,” he said.
Opposition demonstrators have blocked the streets of Armenia’s capital to mark the start of a protest campaign after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan ignored their call to step down over a ceasefire deal struck with Azerbaijan.
Chanting “Nikol, traitor,” and “Armenia without Nikol,” hundreds filled the streets of Yerevan, answering an opposition call to protest after Pashinyan ignored a deadline of midday Tuesday set by the opposition for him to quit.
Pashinyan, who swept to power in a peaceful revolution in May 2018, accepted a Russian-brokered ceasefire deal last month to end a bloody conflict between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over the Nagorno-Karabakh region and surrounding areas.
Pashinyan’s opponents want him out over what they say was his disastrous handling of the six-week conflict that handed Azerbaijan territorial gains.
Pashinyan has accepted responsibility for the conflict’s outcome but said he is now responsible for ensuring national security and stabilising the ex-Soviet republic of approximately three million people.
Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an opposition politician for the Armenian Revolutionary Federation party, announced the start of coordinated civil disobedience in a televised address on Tuesday after the deadline passed.
“Nikol, you will go anyway. Leave peacefully,” he said.