Thousands rally in Armenia against disputed peace deal

Thousands of furious protesters rallied in the
Armenian capital for a fourth day running on Friday demanding Prime Minister
Nikol Pashinyan resign over a controversial peace agreement with Azerbaijan.
Pashinyan announced the Moscow-brokered agreement
Tuesday, ending more than six weeks of intense fighting over the disputed
region of Nagorno-Karabakh that left at least 1,400 dead and displaced tens of
thousands.
Armenia agreed to cede parts of the region to
Azerbaijan as well as other territories controlled by Armenian separatists
since the 1990s.
The decision sparked fury in Armenia, where
demonstrators stormed and ransacked government buildings and have since staged
daily demonstrations in Yerevan, demanding that Pashinyan step down.
On Friday, several thousand protesters gathered in
downtown Yerevan's Liberty Square, many holding placards that read "Nikol
traitor."
"Who are you to give up our lands, you had no
right to do this!" Artur Beglarian, one of the demonstrators who was
wounded in action in Karabakh, shouted through a loudspeaker.
"Our soldiers were fighting heroically,"
he said, addressing the crowd from a wheelchair.
Vardan Voskanyan from the opposition Homeland party
said: "The man who signed this agreement has no right to live in our
country."
"We need a leader who will change this shameful
agreement for the better."
Earlier on Friday, Armenian courts freed from
custody 10 prominent opposition figures accused of sparking unrest after
Pashinyan announced the peace deal.
Prosecutors have charged the politicians --
including Gagik Tsarukyan, leader of the Prosperous Armenia party, and Ishkhan
Sagateyan of the Dashnaktsutyun party -- with creating "illegal violent
mass disorder."
They were arrested Thursday and face 10 years in
prison but lawyers said their clients were released after courts ruled there
was no reason to keep them in detention.
Nagorno-Karabakh declared independence from
Azerbaijan nearly 30 years ago but it has not been recognised internationally,
even by Armenia.
Fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenian separatists
erupted in late September and persisted despite efforts by France, Russia and
the United States to broker ceasefires that collapsed as both sides accused the
other of violations.