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Armenia: the challenge continues
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- By LeFigaro.fr with AFP
- Update
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The protests in Armenia against the planned increase in electricity tariffs are now entering their second week, the Armenian government will not reverse its decisions reinforced the protest movement.
Several hundred demonstrators have again spent the night outside the presidential palace, blocking traffic to the main artery of the city, reported a journalist.
Thursday evening, about 12,000 protesters had gathered to it, to the largest anti-government demonstration in years. The Prime Minister of Armenia, Hovik Abrahamyan, had said earlier in the day that he would not reconsider its decision to increase by 16% the electricity rates from 1 August, in order to "ensure energy security of the country ".
Protests began in Yerevan on June 19 They have gained importance after hundreds of protesters camped outside the presidential palace were violently dispersed on Tuesday morning, police questioning 237 protesters. Electricity Networks of Armenia (ENA), the company that manages the distribution of electricity in the former Soviet Caucasus republic of 3.2 million people highly dependent on Russia , explained that increasing electricity was necessary due to a sharp devaluation of the local currency, the dram.
Several hundred demonstrators have again spent the night outside the presidential palace, blocking traffic to the main artery of the city, reported a journalist.
Thursday evening, about 12,000 protesters had gathered to it, to the largest anti-government demonstration in years. The Prime Minister of Armenia, Hovik Abrahamyan, had said earlier in the day that he would not reconsider its decision to increase by 16% the electricity rates from 1 August, in order to "ensure energy security of the country ".
Protests began in Yerevan on June 19 They have gained importance after hundreds of protesters camped outside the presidential palace were violently dispersed on Tuesday morning, police questioning 237 protesters. Electricity Networks of Armenia (ENA), the company that manages the distribution of electricity in the former Soviet Caucasus republic of 3.2 million people highly dependent on Russia , explained that increasing electricity was necessary due to a sharp devaluation of the local currency, the dram.
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