YEREVAN: Armenia’s embattled Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told thousands of rallying supporters on Monday that he was ready to hold early elections to bring the country out of a political crisis. Facing fire for his handling of last year’s disastrous war with Azerbaijan, Pashinyan filled Yerevan’s central Republic Square with more than 20,000 supporters, as government opponents demonstrated outside parliament to demand his resignation.
The rival rallies came with Pashinyan under increasing pressure for his handling of the war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, which saw Armenia suffer heavy losses and agree to hand over swathes of territory to Azerbaijan.
The political uncertainty is threatening to set off a chaotic power struggle in Armenia, an impoverished ex-Soviet republic on the borders of Turkey and Iran.
“If the parliamentary opposition agrees to early elections, we will agree to early elections,” Pashinyan told the flag-waving crowd.
“Let’s go to the polls and see whose resignation the people are demanding,” said Pashinyan, who swept to power after spearheading peaceful protests in 2018.
He admitted to making mistakes and asked for forgiveness, but denounced those he said were trying to undermine the country’s democracy.
“Only the people can decide who will remain in power,” said Pashinyan, adding that old rivals are trying to undermine his government.
“We don’t want the same old leaders to come back, we elected Pashinyan and we trust him,” Narine Garibyan, a 59-year-old artist, told AFP at the rally.
“He is not guilty for what happened with the war. We are all guilty because we were silent all those years when the old leaders robbed the country and neglected the army.”
Several thousand pro-opposition protesters meanwhile gathered nearby outside parliament, where activists have set up a tent camp and vowed to stay until Pashinyan and his government resigns.
“We want to change those in charge — they sold out our land,” Hovsep Hovsepyan, a 65-year-old pensioner, told AFP at the protest.
“Pashinyan is the one responsible for losing the war, only him... He should go, it is a matter of honour. The people demand it.”
Monday’s rallies coincided with the anniversary of the deaths of 10 people when riot police dispersed thousands of protesters contesting the result of a presidential election in Yerevan on March 1, 2008.
President Armen Sarkisian, whose role is largely symbolic, called for all sides to show restraint on the anniversary.
“Political struggle must not go beyond the bounds of the law, it should not lead to shocks and instability,” he said in a statement.
Sarkisian has become a central figure in the crisis after he refused on Saturday to sign an order from Pashinyan to dismiss the chief of the military’s general staff Onik Gasparyan.