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The 2022 Armenian protests (also known as the Resistance Movement; Armenian: Դիմադրության շարժում, romanized: Dimadrut’yan sharzhum) were a series of anti-government protests in Armenia that started on 5 April 2022. [5] The protests continued into June 2022, and many protesters were detained by police in Yerevan. [6]
11 January – 2021–2022 Armenia–Azerbaijan border crisis: Three Armenian soldiers and one Azerbaijani soldier are killed in a shootout at the border town of Verin Shorzha, Gegharkunik Province. [2] [3] 14 January – The first meeting of the normalization process of Armenia–Turkey relations was held in Moscow, Russia. [4]
Protests in front of National Assembly of Armenia, 13 September 2022. On 14 September, protests erupted in Armenia's capital, Yerevan, and in Stepanakert, the capital of the self-proclaimed Republic of Artsakh calling for Nikol Pashinyan's resignation over his statements about a signing a potential peace agreement with Azerbaijan that would ...
Opposition supporters in Armenia on Tuesday ramped up pressure on the prime minister to resign over his handling of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan, setting up a protest tent camp on ...
This is a list of protests in Armenia in chronological order: 1965 Yerevan demonstrations; Karabakh movement (1988–1991) 1996 Armenian presidential election protests; 2003–04 Armenian protests; 2008 Armenian presidential election protests; 2011 Armenian protests; Mashtots Park Movement (2012) 2013 Armenian protests; Electric Yerevan (2015)
On 6 October 2022, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev met at the first European Political Community summit in Prague in an attempt to resolve the long running Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the recent Armenia–Azerbaijan border crisis.
2013 Armenian protests; 2018 Armenian Revolution; 2022 Armenian protests; 2023 Armenian protests; 2024 Armenian protests; A. 2021 Armenian political crisis;
The Black Lives Matter protests, launched after the murder of George Floyd, marked a rising up of the country’s far left that was unparalleled in modern times, Vysotsky and others said.