Yanukovich Square In Armenian Town ‘Renamed’

Ukraine -- Police officers are seen on Maidan Nezalezhnosti square in Kiev, where clashes began between protesters and the police.

Protesting against continuing bloodshed in Ukraine, a group of Armenian opposition activists defaced on Thursday plaques in a square in the central town of Spitak bearing Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich’s name.

The young activists mostly affiliated with Civil Contract, a new Armenian opposition group led by Nikol Pashinian, branded Yanukovich a dictator and blamed him for the vicious clashes between anti-government protesters and security forces in Kiev which have left dozens of people dead.

Photographs of the action posted on Araratnews.am showed them plastering the plaques with posters saying that the square has been named after Sergey Nigoyan, an ethnic Armenian protester who was shot dead in Kiev last month. “There is no Yanukovich square in Armenia anymore,” declared the news website run by one of the activists, Alen Simonian.

Armenia - A poster in a square in Spitak that bears Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich’s name saying that it has been named after the slain Ukrainian protester Sergey Nigoyan, Spitak, 20Feb2014. (Photo courtesy of Araratnews.am).

Police and local authorities did not immediately react to the action.

The square was named after Yanukovich in 2008 in recognition of his role in the reconstruction of Spitak, a small town devastated by a catastrophic earthquake in 1988. He had spent six months there in 1988-1989 in his capacity as head of a Ukrainian construction company sent to the earthquake zone by the Soviet government.

Yanukovich, then the leader of Ukraine’s main opposition party, personally inaugurated the Spitak square together with Gagik Tsarukian, the leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK). The naming was apparently initiated by Tsarukian, whose party was in government at the time.

As the unrest in Ukraine took a violent turn last month opposition and civic circles in Yerevan began demanding that the Spitak municipality change the square name. The town mayor, Gagik Sahakian, has rejected those calls. “We are grateful people, and we try to thank all those people who have done good things for us,” 1in.am quoted him as saying earlier on Thursday.

“I really feel bad about such tragic events taking place in friendly Ukraine,” said Sahakian. “But there are victims on both the government and opposition sides.”

The Armenian government’s official reaction to the deadly clashes in the Ukrainian capital was also cautious. “Ukraine is a friendly country for Armenia,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Tigran Balayan said on Wednesday. “We hope that the parties will resume negotiations to find a peaceful solution to contentious issues.”