YEREVAN — At least 144 people were hospitalized with burns after mass explosions of campaign balloons during a pre-election concert and rally held in Yerevan’s main square by the Republican Party of Armenia late on Friday.
Eyewitnesses said hundreds of gas-filled balloons held up by young Republican Party activists at Republic Square exploded, sparking a massive firewall and injuring dozens of them.
“It was a huge blaze,” said one woman at the scene.
About two dozen ambulances were rushed to the scene shortly after the blasts. An ambulance doctor told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) that some 50 mostly young people required hospitalization.
Citing “preliminary data,” the Armenian Ministry of Emergency Situations put the total number of injured and hospitalized people at 144. In a written statement, the ministry said they are receiving urgent treatment at eight Yerevan hospitals.
The Armenian police were quick to launch an investigation. The chief of Yerevan’s police department, General Nerses Nazarian, suggested that the explosions were most probably triggered by a cigarette or a lighter. Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Nazarian all but ruled out the possibility of deliberate arson. “It was apparently an accident,” he said.
Despite the chaos and mass injuries, the Republican Party campaign event was interrupted by only several minutes, with the show moderator downplaying the accident and urging thousands of people standing in the sprawling square to stay on.
President Sarkisian addressed the crowd shortly afterwards. He did not mention the unprecedented emergency in his speech. The concert continued after the speech.
Sarkisian visited one of the Yerevan hospitals later on Friday. State television showed him entering hospital wards and inquiring about the condition of young people treated there. Some of them visibly suffered severe injuries to their faces and hands.
In an ensuing written address to the nation, the Armenian president called for calm and pledged to identify and punish those responsible for what he called a “blow to all of us.” “Thank God, we avoided irreversible consequences,” he said. “At this moment, all the victims are receiving the necessary assistance and, if need be, the best specialists from abroad will be invited to Armenia for their further recovery.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Get notified of the latest updates from MassisPost.

You May Also Like

The Future of Democracy and State Building in Postconflict Armenia

BY LAURE DELCOUR Carnegie Europe The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict interrupted Armenia’s reform movement…

Conference on Armenian Photographers: “The Eyes of Our Culture”

MISSION HILLS, CA — Ararat-Eskijian Museum Presents a Conference on Armenian Photographers:…

No Single Millimetre of Armenia’s Territory Will Be Ceded, PM Pashinyan Reiterates

SYUNIK — Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan reiterates that no single millimeter of…

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide: Akın Birdal

By Hambersom Aghbashian Akın Birdal (born 2 January 1948, Niğde Province, Turkey)…