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Activist Urges Air Malta To Stop Armenian Journalist's Deportation

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  • Activist Urges Air Malta To Stop Armenian Journalist's Deportation

    ACTIVIST URGES AIR MALTA TO STOP ARMENIAN JOURNALIST'S DEPORTATION
    David Vella

    Malta Star, Malta
    April 12 2007

    "They told me Malta does not grant asylum", journalist tells
    maltastar.com

    In an attempt to stop authorities from deporting an Armenian journalist
    back to her homeland, where she faces political oppression, a British
    human rights activist, sent e-mails to various Air Malta offices
    urging them not to fly the refugee to the country where her family's
    safety is threatened.

    Gina Khachatryan, who was forced to leave her country in 2003 after
    being threatened for revealing electoral fraud in her homeland,
    has been refused political refuge in the UK and will be deported
    back to Armenia, via Malta and Russia, on an Air Malta flight that
    leaves the UK on Friday (13 April 2007). "She fears these threats
    will be carried through if she is returned to Armenia" the activist,
    Ian Pollock, wrote to the Maltese airline.

    On Thursday, maltastar.com contacted Gina in her cell at the Yarl's
    Wood detention centre in Bedford. Noticeably distraught, she explained
    that her family has no means to get any legal aid, and all the help
    she is getting is from human rights activists.

    "At the moment I am trying to send an urgent fax to the European
    Court of Human Rights, in the hope that they'll take action and stop
    my deportation" she said. Gina had been granted refugee status in
    2003, but the British authorities have not accepted to renew her
    asylum status.

    Numerous human right activists are working hard to keep Gina and her
    family from entering Armenia. The couple's daughter, Ellen, has spent
    four years in England now. She attended a British primary school,
    and knows nothing about her homeland.

    In the meantime, even Gina is not well. She has been diagnosed with
    anaemia, but results for blood tests to check whether or not she is
    fit to travel, may not be issued before Gina is taken to the airport.

    "I spoke to her this morning and she tells me she also feels nauseous
    and feverish" Pollock, a former journalist, wrote in his appeal to
    Air Malta.

    Ordered to pack up in 30 minutes

    On Easter Monday, police closed off the street in Salford, where Gina,
    her husband, and their five year old daughter live, and ordered the
    family to pack up and be ready to leave the house in 30 minutes,
    an asylum seekers support group of which the journalist formed part
    wrote. The family was immediately taken to a detention centre, where
    she and her family will remain locked up until they are deported.

    "We did not even have time to get Gina's records to have more
    information on her case" Sue Arnall, from Castaways Organisation,
    told this e-newspaper.

    A bitter 10 days in Malta

    In Armenia, Gina worked as a television journalist. While covering
    the 2003 elections, she uncovered a case of corruption by a candidate
    that was eventually elected to Parliament. When she reported this
    information, she was threatened by members of the MPs' campaign
    team, and arrested for 40 days. When her colleagues managed to get
    her out of prison, she fled the country. On her way to the UK, in 11
    September 2003, she arrived in Malta. "I remember we stayed in Malta
    for 10 days", Gina told maltastar.com, "we had no money with us, and
    we could only afford the hotel. Basically we could not even buy food".

    And why didn't she try to apply for refugee status in Malta? "On
    the plane to Malta, a Bulgarian woman told me that Malta is a small
    country and the authorities do not accept to give asylum to anyone".

    So the family continued on their way to the UK.

    Numerous British journalist organisations are also supporting Gina's
    cause, in the hope that she will not be repatriated.

    "Please do not allow this woman and her family to be sent back to so
    much uncertainty" the human rights activist wrote to Air Malta.

    http://www.maltastar.com/pages/msFullArt.a sp?an=11300
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