Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fugitive Ex-Minister Denied Election Registration

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Fugitive Ex-Minister Denied Election Registration

    FUGITIVE EX-MINISTER DENIED ELECTION REGISTRATION
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 6 2007

    A Yerevan court on Friday upheld the refusal by election officials
    to register Eduard Madatian, a fugitive former transport minister
    charged with plotting to assassinate Armenia's top leaders, as a
    candidate in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

    Madatian is believed to have fled the country in November 2004 to
    avoid prosecution for allegedly masterminding a failed attempt on
    the life of President Robert Kocharian and then Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian. His whereabouts have remained unknown since then,
    with law-enforcement authorities saying only that he lives abroad.

    A criminal investigation into the alleged assassination bid was
    suspended in July 2005 due to their failure to track down and arrest
    Madatian. Few details of the mysterious criminal case have been
    made public.

    Madatian, who ran the Armenian Ministry of Transport and Communications
    from 1999-2002, reminded the government of his existence last month
    when newspaper reports revealed his intention to run for parliament
    from a single-mandate constituency in Yerevan's southern Erebuni
    district. The ex-minister, better known to local residents as Khuchuch
    (Curly) Edo, wielded considerable economic and political influence
    in the area before going into hiding.

    The district election commission rejected the registration request
    on the grounds that Madatian failed to submit a police statement
    certifying that he has resided in Armenia for the past five years,
    something which is required by law. The Erebuni court of first instance
    upheld the decision, rejecting an appeal lodged on behalf of Madatian
    by his brother Grigor and lawyer, Hovik Arsenian,.

    Both men claimed that the ex-minister actually lives in Armenia and
    is hiding from police because he fears for his life. "Eduard Madatian
    did permanently reside in Armenia in 2005 and 2006," Arsenian told
    the court.

    Seeking to substantiate the claims, Grigor Madatian dialed an
    undisclosed number on his mobile phone to call a man who identified
    himself as his fugitive brother. The man told RFE/RL that he is
    currently in Armenia and will turn himself in if he is registered as
    a candidate.

    Under Armenian law, parliamentary election candidates can be detained
    and prosecuted only with the Central Election Commission's permission.

    A police representative, Taguhi Hovsepian, defended the Erebuni
    police department's refusal to certify Madatian's eligibility for
    the elections. "How can we certify his residency in Armenia?" she
    told the court. "Maybe that person doesn't physically exist anymore."

    Hovsepian also said the police discovered in 2005 that Madatian
    had obtained Russian citizenship in 1994 in violation of Armenia's
    constitution which did not allow dual nationality until recently.
Working...
X