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Nairobi: Passports mix-up in panic to expel Arturs

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  • Nairobi: Passports mix-up in panic to expel Arturs

    The Nation, Kenya
    June 30 2006

    Passports mix-up in panic to expel Arturs

    Story by LUCAS BARASA and MUGUMO MUNENE
    Publication Date: 6/30/2006

    The Armenian Artur brothers were mistakenly given return air tickets
    in the panic to get them kicked out of Kenya, it was revealed
    yesterday.

    The tickets were about to be handed over with take-off just 30
    minutes away, when the error was spotted and the return part of the
    tickets was ripped out, the inquiry into the brothers' activities was
    told.

    And as a whirlwind of activity went on around them to ensure they got
    on the plane in time, Artur Margaryan was allowed to travel on
    someone else's passport - that of a Russian called Gevorkiyan - while
    his supposed brother Sargsyan who had no passport was given emergency
    travel papers.

    Bizarrely, instead of saying he was being expelled, the document
    merely stated he was going to Dubai on business which meant Mr
    Sargsyan could legally claim he was never deported. And it was
    wrongly dated, too: July 9 instead of June 9, the inquiry was told.

    Because the paper, known as a Certificate of Emergency Travel, said
    Mr Sargsyan was travelling on business and there are still 10 days to
    go until July 9, he could in theory use it to return to Kenya, the
    inquiry heard.

    And in a day of dramatic disclosures, it was also claimed that the
    brothers were cleared to work in Kenya by both the Immigration
    Department and the National Security Intelligence Service, which
    vetted their work permit applications.

    The series of revelations rocked the second day of the inquiry into
    the two Armenians, described the previous day by Immigration minister
    Gideon Konchella as "dubious international criminals."

    Mr Sargsyan's emergency travel papers showed he was either Armenian
    or Russian, the inquiry at Kenyatta International Conference Centre
    was told by its second witness, principal immigration officer Joseph
    Ndathi.

    Asked why the certificate did not read 'deportation', Mr Ndathi
    replied, "it is a question of language semantics." He explained: "He
    was going to Dubai where he had come from to continue with his
    business."

    Asked by assisting counsel Warui Mungai if Mr Sargsyan could claim he
    was not deported, Mr Ndathi said, "he will be within his rights to do
    so."

    He said it was the deportation orders and the systems put in place to
    prevent the Artur brothers from re-entering Kenya that mattered most.


    Mr Mungai told Mr Ndathi investigations also showed the Artur
    brothers were given return air tickets. Mr Ndathi replied that the
    four Kenya Airways tickets - including two for two other people
    deported with the brothers - were delivered by lawyer Kamau Mbugua
    and two other unidentified people.

    "My lords, they were return tickets but the officers scrutinised and
    the return coupons were removed. They left with a one-way ticket,"
    the immigration officer said.

    The tickets were bought using taxpayers money, in spite of the law
    allowing the Government to ask wealthy people to pay for their own
    travel.

    On the deportation date the lawyer, Mr Mbugua also handed Mr Ndathi a
    passport in the name of Mr Arthur Gevorkiyan for use by Mr Artur
    Margaryan, the taller and bearded brother. It was this passport,
    showing Mr Gevorkiyan as a Russian, that Mr Margaryan used to travel
    to Dubai.

    Mr Ndathi had a hard time explaining to the commission why Mr
    Margaryan was allowed to travel using a passport that was not in his
    own name. He said that there were only 30 minutes to the flight and
    that Kenya Airways had agreed to the arrangement.

    "The security of the State should be seen as of greater concern than
    a travel document. The passport was also accepted in Dubai," Mr
    Ndathi said.

    A photograph in a copy of Mr Margaryan's passport tabled before the
    Commission was different from that in Mr Gevorkiyan's passport.

    He said the certificate of emergency travel were recognised
    internationally as one-way travel documents and anyone found re-using
    one could be fined.

    Mr Mungai: Must the deportee have a passport?

    Mr Ndathi: It is one of the documents one must have. If not, we issue
    an emergency travel certificate.

    Mr Ndathi said the true nationalities of the Artur brothers were
    unknown and that his department had relied on information given to
    them to conclude they were Armenians. "They have given conflicting
    documents and we need to research these people further," he said.

    He said the Arturs had never applied for Kenyan citizenship and that
    Kenyan passports recovered from their Runda home were stolen from the
    Immigration department in May. Another passport stolen on May 2, was
    still missing. He said Kenyan passports could only be granted to
    foreigners with entry permits who had been in the country for at
    least five years. Records show the Arturs first came to Kenya last
    year.

    A passport in the name of Artak Sargsyan recovered from the Runda
    residence showed the holder was a Kenyan. And although the name was
    slightly different from another passport found there, which
    identified him as Artur and not Artak, the photographs in the two
    passports were the same. Immigration records showed the stolen
    passports belonged to Selasio Njeru Mutumuka and Edith Kahaya
    Asegere.

    Assisting counsel Dorcas Oduor said signatures in the recovered
    passports had been taken for forensic examination. Mr Ndathi said
    Kenyan passports were susceptible to having the photographs switched.


    He blamed problems facing the Immigration department to under
    funding, staff shortage and poor technological advancement. He said
    the department received little support from the Treasury and relied
    on part of its revenue collection, whose total was Sh1.8 billion last
    year, for development, operations, and staff pay and allowances.

    Its efforts to upgrade its information communication technology were
    hampered by the Anglo Leasing scandal, Mr Ndathi said.

    It also came to light that the country's Intelligence and
    Immigrations officials fell for suspect official documents presented
    by the Armenian brothers.

    The commission was told the brothers were cleared by both the
    National Security Intelligence Service and the Immigration Department
    to conduct business in Kenya. The clearance was given following a
    request made by the Immigration department in keeping with their
    tradition of having every request for an entry permit checked before
    foreigners were allowed into the country.

    The Armenians were finally issued with two-year permits on January 23
    this year. They were cancelled after the two were deported.
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