YEREVAN — Residents of a Yerevan neighborhood joined by dozens of youth activists confronted riot police for a second consecutive day on Thursday as they tried to halt the construction of a new apartment block sanctioned by the municipal authorities.

The protesters said that the building would be located too close to their homes and block their sunlight. They claimed that the unfolding construction is also weakening the earthquake protection of the nearby apartment blocks. Some of them showed officials cracks in their walls to back up these claims.

Several of the activists entered the construction site to try to stop excavators digging up the ground further. They were forcibly removed by police officers before the crowd blocked the adjacent Komitas Avenue, one of Yerevan’s main thoroughfares passing through the northern Arabkir administrative district. The police used force to unblock the street.

Arabkir’s chief executive, Hrayr Antonian, and Yerevan’s Deputy Mayor Davit Ohanian visited the neighborhood in the following hours to talk to the angry protesters. They both denied local residents’ claims that the construction is illegal.

Still, Ohanian acknowledged that the developer, a private firm called Liber, has so far obtained permission to build only the building’s foundation. He said Mayor Taron Markarian and other municipal officials will meet to decide soon whether to allow it to go ahead with the rest of the construction work.

Ohanian stressed at the same time that Liber has already agreed to slash the future building’s height from 14 to 7 stories to address residents’ concerns. Some of them appeared ready to agree to the construction if the company makes more concessions. But others insisted that the construction be halted altogether.

Housing construction in Yerevan has been marred by street protests and corruption allegations for more than a decade. The municipal administration and Armenia’s central government have been widely criticized for allowing it in green areas and paying modest compensation to owners of hundreds of old houses in the city center that were torn down in the mid-2000s. The authorities have always defended the legality of the process.

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Your email address will not be published.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

Mexico Hosts Events Commemorating Armenian Genocide Centennial

MEXICO CITY — From May 14 through May 17, a range of…

George Kirazian’s “Book of Ruth” Ballet Premiere in April

SAN DIEGO – Armenian Composer George Kirazian’s new ballet based on the Book…

By 2050 One Third of Armenia’s Population Will Be Over 60, Projections Show

YEREVAN — Today UNFPA Armenia and RA Ministry of Labor and Social…

Israel Charny: A Moral Israel Must Recognize the Armenian Genocide

By Israel W. Charny Israel must put an end to this charade…