
Armenia church-police clash escalates over political tensions
Two sides have been at loggerheads since Catholicos Garegin II -- the church's spiritual leader -- began calling for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to resign over Armenia's military defeat to Azerbaijan in 2020.
The loss of the disputed Karabakh region to Azerbaijan in 2023, Armenia's arch-foe, has divided the country and escalated the dispute.
On Wednesday, the Armenian authorities said they had foiled a coup plot involving a senior cleric who had rallied opposition to Pashinyan and more than a dozen other suspects.
The latest confrontation erupted after police arrived at the residence of the head of the Apostolic Church to arrest another senior figure, archbishop Mikael Adjapahyan.
He is accused of publicly calling for the government to be overthrown.
Masked police attempted to enter the residence of Garegin II to arrest Adjapahyan.
Prosecutors had earlier charged him with 'public calls aimed at seizing power... and violently overthrowing the constitutional order'.
Following the scuffle between priests and law enforcement officers, Adjapahyan said he would surrender to police but denied any wrongdoing.
'This is a blatant act of lawlessness against me,' he said.
'I have never been a threat to our country. The real threat sits in government. I won't hide. I'll go with them.'
But locals and priests closed the gates of the residence, preventing Adjapahyan from leaving the premises and surrendering to police.
Armenia's security service said it would deploy additional forces to detain Adjapahyan.
Earlier this month, Pashinyan escalated the feud with the church by accusing Garegin II of fathering an illegitimate child and urging believers to oust him.
That prompted calls for Pashinyan to be excommunicated.

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