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Armenian Prosecutors Vow To Monitor Controversial Probe

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  • Armenian Prosecutors Vow To Monitor Controversial Probe

    ARMENIAN PROSECUTORS VOW TO MONITOR CONTROVERSIAL PROBE
    Tigran Avetisian, Ruzanna Stepanian

    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article /1967375.html
    24.02.2010

    Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian said on Wednesday that he
    has instructed his subordinates to oversee controversial criminal
    proceedings launched by the Armenian police against a brother of
    Khachatur Sukiasian, a prominent opposition businessman.

    Hovsepian told journalists that the chief prosecutors of Yerevan and
    its southern Erebuni districts have been tasked with ensuring that
    the police respect the due process of law in the ongoing investigation
    condemned by the Sukiasian family and the Armenian opposition.

    He said they will specifically have to make sure that "all the
    evidence is collected within the bounds of law." Hovsepian did not
    clarify whether that means the prosecutors doubt the legality of the
    police actions taken against Saribek Sukiasian until now.

    Sukiasian and one of his employees were arrested on February 12 in
    a police raid on the head offices of the SIL Concern group belonging
    to his extended family. They both were released pending investigation
    three days later.

    The police said initially that the two men are suspected of threatening
    to kill a fellow entrepreneur, Gor Davtian. A police statement issued
    on February 12 cited Davtian as alleging that Sukiasian forced him
    to sign "some documents" relating to his shares in a mineral water
    company called Byuregh.

    Police officials said several days later, however, that Davtian did
    not hear death threats from Sukiasian and was only forcibly kept in
    the SIL headquarters for several hours. Contradicting the initial
    police statement, they claimed that the police raid was actually
    aimed at rescuing the "imprisoned" businessman.

    Accordingly, Sukiasian was charged under an article of the Armenian
    Criminal Code that deals with "illegally depriving a person of their
    liberty motivated by material gain." The crime is punishable by
    between three and five years' imprisonment.

    The conflicting police statements only raised more questions about the
    credibility of the case which Sukiasian says is part of a continuing
    government vendetta waged against his family. His lawyers said on
    Tuesday that it is aimed at preventing the Sukiasians from purchasing
    Byuregh, 80 percent of which has until now been owned by Davtian and
    another businessman.

    The Sukiasians already bought the commanding stake from the two men
    in late 2008. An Armenian court controversially annulled the deal
    last November.

    According to Saribek Sukiasian's lawyers, the two sides were close
    to signing another takeover agreement in the weeks leading up to the
    police inquiry. They said Davtian visited the SIL headquarters on
    February 12 to ask Sukiasian for protection against Ruben Hayrapetian,
    an influential tycoon with close government connections. They said
    Hayrapetian used threats to warn Davtian against selling his Byuregh
    shares to Sukiasian.

    "He was also summoned by security bodies, including the prosecutor's
    office, and told to sell his shares to Ruben Hayrapetian," one of
    the lawyers, Lusine Sahakian, told a news conference.

    Hayrapetian, who also heads the Armenian Football Federation, already
    bought late last year another water plant that was owned by the
    Sukiasians until being confiscated by the Armenian government. Tax
    officials raided the Bjni company and accused it of large-scale tax
    evasion shortly after Khachatur Sukiasian publicly voiced support
    for opposition Levon Ter-Petrosian in September 2007.

    Saribek's lawyers again dismissed the charges brought against their
    client and alleged numerous due process violations by the police. They
    also claimed to have photo and video evidence of Davtian leaving the
    SIL offices less than 20 minutes before the police raid.

    The businessman's whereabouts have been unknown since the launch
    of the police investigation. A spokesman for the Armenian police,
    Sayat Shirinian, on Wednesday denied newspaper reports that Davtian
    has fled Armenia.
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