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Convicted 'Coup Plotter' Claims 'Political Revenge'

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  • Convicted 'Coup Plotter' Claims 'Political Revenge'

    CONVICTED 'COUP PLOTTER' CLAIMS 'POLITICAL REVENGE'
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Aug 14 2007

    A Karabakh war veteran convicted for pushing for a violent regime
    change claims the authorities have been using the penal code as a
    tool for taking revenge on politicians with opposition views.

    Vartan Malkhasian, a senior member of the Alliance of Armenian
    Volunteers, was sentenced to two years in prison by a Yerevan lower
    court last week for calling for a "violent overthrow of constitutional
    order."

    In an interview with RFE/RL, Malkhasian, a lawyer by training, disputed
    the fairness of the application of the criminal charge against him.

    Article 301 of Armenia's criminal code envisages a fine or up to
    three years in prison for such an offense. Malkhasian says it is
    difficult to measure the gravity of the 'public call' to pass a
    commensurate sentence.

    "It turns out that some calls are less dangerous than others. There
    is no explanation to this. My speech did not contain any calls for
    violence at all," Malkhasian said. "I addressed my speech to those
    who defile the country and the criminal gangs. Neither of them can
    be considered as a state or constitutional order."

    Prosecutors had charged Malkhasian and group leader Zhirayr Sefilian
    with calling for a violent regime change in their speeches last
    December during the founding congress of their pressure group. The
    National Security Service claimed the two had planned to mount an
    armed uprising against the government ahead of the May elections to
    the National Assembly.

    Sefilian, a Lebanese citizen who was a field commander during the
    1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan, was later acquitted by court, but
    was found guilty of a lesser charge of illegal arms possession and
    sentenced to 18 months in prison.

    Malkhasian is convinced that he was imprisoned for his opposition views
    and for his activities as part of the movement opposing territorial
    concessions to Azerbaijan.

    "They have been looking for an occasion to take revenge on me, and
    that occasion suited them well," Malkhasian told RFE/RL. "But we
    become even more adamant under this pressure."

    Malkhasian, who was once expelled from the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) for dissidence, says the party whose two
    senior members were prosecuted on similar charges under the previous
    administration, should have raised their voice of protest against
    the persecutions.

    "We hoped Dashnaktsutyun would struggle for justice, but when they
    came to power it turned out they were acting against their program,"
    Malkhasian said.

    And Sefilian added: "I think all governments deny the presence of
    political prisoners. Dashnaktsutyun is part of this government and
    it is natural that they should deny it."
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