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Mother Who Fears For Her Life Deported With Family

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  • Mother Who Fears For Her Life Deported With Family

    MOTHER WHO FEARS FOR HER LIFE DEPORTED WITH FAMILY
    By Yakub Qureshi

    Manchester Evening News
    April 16, 2007 Monday

    AN Armenian journalist who feared for her life after revealing alleged
    election fraud has been deported from Britain.

    Gina Khatcharyan, 30, had been living in Bury since 2003 with her
    husband Vahan and five-year-old daughter Elena while seeking asylum.

    The Home Office accepted that the TV journalist had received death
    threats for exposing ballot rigging in her home country - but believed
    the risks to her and her family were exaggerated.

    The family were placed on a flight from Heathrow destined for the
    Armenian capital Yerevan, via connecting flights through Malta
    and Russia.

    Campaign groups, including the National Union of Journalists, had
    staged a desperate attempt to apply for a delay in deportation,
    but were unable to file papers in time. The Maltese authorities had
    been asked to offer the family temporary asylum, but were unable
    to intervene.

    The family was hoping to seek leave to stay in Russia rather
    than completing the final leg of the journey to Armenia, where Ms
    Khatcharayan expected to be arrested on arrival. The family's daughter
    Elena had been attending classes at Heap Bridge primary school in
    Bury and campaigners say English is her first language.

    Sue Arnall, of the Bury Castaways asylum group, said: "I spoke with
    Gina before she left and she was just desperate. She did not have a
    lawyer because she had been refused legal aid.

    "There was a last attempt to re-examine her case with people
    contributing money to pay for a human rights lawyer but unfortunately
    it was too late."

    Ms Khatchatryan claims to have witnessed ballot stuffing while a
    polling booth observer during local elections and said she subsequently
    received death threats after alerting the authorities.

    Although the central Asian country has improved its political and trade
    links with Europe since leaving Soviet control in 1991, it has been
    routinely criticised by international observers for electoral fraud.

    It was also named as the 101st worst country out of 168 for press
    freedom restrictions by Reporters without Borders in 2006.
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