Prominent Armenian cleric gives himself up amid coup accusations: Live Updates

Law enforcement raided the local seat of the national church, which had protested territorial concessions to Azerbaijan

A prominent Armenian Apostolic Church (AAC) cleric chose to give himself up despite protesters' attempts to defend him.

Armenian police raided the seat of the country's Apostolic Church, the country's largest, in the city of Vagharshapat, leading to major clashes between clerics, church members, and law enforcement.

Though Pro-Church protesters managed to block earlier attempts to detain Archbishop Mikael Adjapahyan, the cleric chose to walk to the Investigative Committee (IC) building and turn himself in. Earlier, the authorities had tried to detain Adjapahyan on suspicion of attempting to stage a coup - accusations the cleric has denied.

A number of pro-Church protesters have been detained, and the IC has announced that it has launched criminal proceedings into obstruction of justice.

The country's government has been at odds with the AAC for months, as it emerged as the main driver behind mass protests against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's agreement to return several border villages to Azerbaijan.

While Pashinyan portrayed the move as a pathway to mending tenuous relations between the two former Soviet republics, many Armenians have seen it as a betrayal of national interests.

As the stand-off escalated, Armenian authorities on Wednesday arrested Bagrat Galstanyan, a high-profile cleric and a key protest leader, on terrorism charges.

They also detained Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, who voiced support for the AAC. Karapetyan faces charges of calling for the overthrow of the state.

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