On Mar. 1, 2008, Israeli troops turned heavy firepower on rocket squads bombarding southern Israel, killing 54 Palestinians in the deadliest day in Gaza since the current round of fighting erupted in 2000, AP reported.
Two Israeli soldiers were killed and seven were wounded in the clashes, the military said.
The violence took a heavy toll on Gaza civilians. Moderate Palestinian leaders called the killings a “genocide” and threatened to call off peace talks.
“The response to these rockets can’t be that harsh and heinous,” said Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. “It is nowadays described as a holocaust.”
In the early hours of the morning on Mar. 1, 2008, national police and military forces in Yerevan dispersed peaceful demonstrations that had been going on for 10 days non-stop in Liberty Square protesting the official results of the presidential election. Later that same day, people spontaneously gathered in the square in front of the Aleksandr Myasnikyan statue, across the street from Yerevan City Hall. In the evening, a state of emergency was declared and the army called in to quell the protests, who used “excessive force and violence” which resulted in the death of 10 people, including Grigor Gevorgyan.
Till today, no arrests or charges have been made in connection with Gevorgyan’s murder.