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Armenian opposition leader gets PM support, calls off strike

By Ed Adamczyk and Danielle Haynes
Armenian opposition leader and Armenian parliament member Nikol Pashinyan (C) waves to supporters in Yerevan, Armenia, on Wednesday. Photo by Zurab Kurtsikidze/EPA-EFE
1 of 2 | Armenian opposition leader and Armenian parliament member Nikol Pashinyan (C) waves to supporters in Yerevan, Armenia, on Wednesday. Photo by Zurab Kurtsikidze/EPA-EFE

May 2 (UPI) -- Armenian opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan asked his supporters to halt a general strike Wednesday after he said the country's ruling party assured him of its support in his bid to be prime minister.

"The issue has practically been solved," he told protesters gathered in the capital of Yerevan.

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Earlier in the day, Pashinyan called on supporters to block streets, airports, the railway and other public transportation after he failed to get enough votes from the National Assembly to become prime minister. He was the only candidate running for the premiership and needed support from a majority of lawmakers to secure the replace former Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan.

The Republican-led legislative body initially indicated it would support him, but some blocked his bid Tuesday, saying he brought chaos to the streets.

On Wednesday, the ruling Republican Party backtracked, saying it would support a candidate nominated by at least a third of lawmakers in the national assembly next week. The party said it would not submit its own candidate for the Tuesday vote.

"All factions said they would support my candidacy... We are suspending protests and going to have a rest," Pashinyan said.

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Earlier in the day, tens of thousands of Armenians clogged Yerevan's streets and blocked roads and government buildings. Demonstrators marched through the streets, blowing horns and waving flags.

RELATED Armenian prime minister resigns after 6 days in office

Airport personnel, construction workers, medical staff and university students were among groups on strike and participating in protest marches. Parliament Speaker Ara Babloyan said demonstrators accosted some members of the assembly at their residences.

Sargsyan resigned April 23, six days after taking office as prime minister. He spent 10 years as president prior to that.

Thousands of demonstrators in the capital accused Sargsyan of corruption and authoritarian rule -- and his resignation followed news that Pashinyan was freed by police after his one-day detention.

Pashinyan, a parliament member and organizer of the protests, was taken by police to an unknown location during earlier demonstrations; two other opposition leaders and at least 200 protesters were detained by police.

In a resignation statement, Sargsyan said, "Nikol Pashinyan was right. I was wrong. This situation requires solutions, but I won't participate in them. I leave the post of this country's prime minister. The movement on the streets is against my office. I will fulfill your claim."

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Armenia, a small country in the Caucasus region straddling Europe and Asia, is a former Soviet republic bounded by Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Iran.

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