* Armenians protest against
electricity price rise
* Russia wary of protests turning
political
* Other ex-Soviet states have seen
"colour revolutions"
MOSCOW/YEREVAN, July 2 (Reuters) --- In
a veiled warning to the West, Russia
cautioned on Thursday against any attempt to spark a new "colour
revolution" in Armenia
by exploiting protests against electricity prices for political ends.
Large crowds of
mostly young people have been protesting in the Armenian capital Yerevan for more than 10
days, demanding the government scrap plans to raise the price of electricity
for households.
Russia has been
wary of unrest on its borders since governments fell in Georgia's 2003 Rose
Revolution, Ukraine's 2003-04 Orange Revolution and Kiev's 2014 Maidan protests
- events in which it says the West backed the protesters.
"You know how
the 'colour revolutions', and the Maidan in Ukraine, started," Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said at a BRICS Youth Summit gathering of young
people from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) in Moscow.
"The current
developments in Armenia
- there is also a temptation among many to use them to whip up anti-government
sentiment although the root of these events is purely economic," Interfax
news agency quoted him as saying.
"It seems
useful for someone to go further and develop these processes in a political
way."
Lavrov said that
the West in particular was paying increasing attention to the role of young
people in shaping national agendas, including through "peaceful
protest".
His comments were
the closest any senior Russian official has come to suggesting the West may
have or be seeking a role in the protest in Armenia ,
which hosts a Russian military base, to pull it further out of Moscow 's orbit.
FEAR OF COLOUR
REVOLUTION
Thousands of
protesters have been gathering every evening in Yerevan though their numbers dwindle during
the day. Police tried to disperse them with water cannon early last week but
the protest continued and has been peaceful since then.
The protesters have
ignored concessions offered by President Serzh Sargsyan, saying they want the
price rise of up to 22 percent planned by the distribution company, a
subsidiary of Russian firm Inter RAO, to be scrapped entirely.
The protesters have
avoided chanting anti-government slogans, saying their demands are limited to
the electricity price dispute, though many also complain about alleged
corruption in Armenia .
"I think the
process of these protests is largely over - or if not over, heading that
way," Armenian political analyst Alexander Iskandaryan told Reuters in Yerevan .
But Russian leaders
fear unrest in neighbouring states could encourage protests in Russia and
President Vladimir Putin said last year that Moscow "should do everything
necessary" to prevent such a "colour revolution" in Russia.
It is also part of
the Eurasian Economic Union, a political and economic bloc set up by Moscow to try to match the economic strength of the
European Union, China and
the United States .
The Kremlin has
said it is up to Armenia 's
government and the protesters to resolve the dispute themselves.
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