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Convicted Hardliner Condemns Authorities' 'Violence'

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  • Convicted Hardliner Condemns Authorities' 'Violence'

    CONVICTED HARDLINER CONDEMNS AUTHORITIES' 'VIOLENCE'
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 13 2007

    A prominent Karabakh war veteran convicted by a Yerevan court last
    week has urged the authorities "to stop ruling over the country
    with violence."

    Zhirayr Sefilian, who was acquitted by the lower court of the charge
    of calling for a violent overthrow of government but found guilty of a
    lesser charge of illegal arms possession, said in an RFE/RL interview
    on Monday that what happened to him and his two friends during the past
    eight months was a case of flagrant violence used by the authorities.

    "It is a violence to jail an innocent person who did not commit any
    crime. I want to remind that violence begets violence. The sooner they
    stop this violence, the better it will be for them," said Sefilian,
    who was sentenced to 18-month imprisonment for possessing a gun
    presented to him as a gift by Karabakh's former defense minister
    Samvel Babayan in 1998.

    Sefilian's lawyer has already appealed the verdict at a higher court.

    Sefilian, who has already spent eight months in pre-trial detention,
    believes the case will be solved in his favor. And even if the appeals
    court upholds the verdict, Sefilian believes he has all grounds to
    be released on parole having served a third of his sentence.

    Sefilian, a Lebanese citizen, thinks that what happened to him and his
    fellow combatants Vartan Malkhasian and Vahan Aroyan was a retribution
    for their firm stand on the Karabakh issue opposing any territorial
    concessions to Azerbaijan and also for their contacts with Armenia's
    opposition forces.

    Vartan Malkhasian, a senior member of Sefilian's hard-line pressure
    group called the Alliance of Armenian Volunteers, was found guilty
    on the sole charge of calling for a violent overthrow of government
    and was sentenced to two years in prison.

    The third defendant in the case, Vahan Aroyan, who had been charged
    only with illegal arms possession, was found guilty and sentenced to
    18-month imprisonment.

    Prosecutors based the criminal case against Sefilian and Malkhasian
    mainly on the two men's speeches at the December 2, 2006 founding
    congress of their organization. Sefilian and Malkhasian were arrested
    soon after that. Aroyan was arrested later after National Security
    Service (NSS) investigators found an arms cache hidden in his village
    house in southern Armenia.

    The NSS also claimed Sefilian and Malkhasian planned to mount an armed
    uprising against the government ahead of the parliamentary elections
    in May.

    Both protested their innocence all along and denounced the case as
    politically motivated.

    Sefilian primarily addresses his critical remarks to President Robert
    Kocharian whom he accuses of personally ordering their imprisonment.

    He claims they have repeatedly received warnings in connection with
    their activities.

    "But they saw it was impossible and had to do something. But for
    those speeches, they would have anyway made up something to have us
    arrested in December," Sefilian told RFE/RL.

    Sefilian, who refuses to accept the results of the 2003 presidential
    election that reelected Robert Kocharian Armenia's president, claims
    the authorities had on many occasions tried to "bribe" him by offering
    various privileges.

    "But I said it's impossible to achieve a positive result in this
    system. Either my service will be pointless, or I will become corrupt
    myself," Sefilian said.

    Now Sefilian believes they will still remain a factor in the upcoming
    presidential election despite the punishment imposed on them, which
    many observers claim was used to eliminate the nationalist activists
    from politics.

    "For people like us it is not a punishment. It is a struggle. No one
    can tell us to keep silent for five months," Sefilian said. "Do not
    let the people have the impression that we are weak because we are
    imprisoned. They [the authorities] have committed such crimes that
    they don't know how to get away with them now."
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