Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Freed Businessmen Again On Trial

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

  • Freed Businessmen Again On Trial

    FREED BUSINESSMEN AGAIN ON TRIAL
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 20 2007

    An Armenian appeals court began hearings Monday on a high-profile
    case involving two businessmen who were sensationally cleared last
    month of controversial criminal charges after spending nearly two
    years in prison.

    Gagik Hakobian, a leading shareholder in the coffee processing
    and packaging company Royal Armenia, and its deputy director Aram
    Ghazarian had been arrested in October 2005 after publicly accusing
    the Armenian customs of corruption. They went on trial late last year
    on charges of smuggling and tax fraud.

    The State Customs Committee and the National Security Service (NSS)
    claim that Royal Armenia illegally avoided paying more than 1 billion
    drams ($3 million) worth of taxes and import duties. Prosecutors
    representing them in the court have demanded that Hakobian and
    Ghazarian be sentenced to 12 and 11 years in prison respectively.

    The defendants and their lawyers have dismissed the accusations,
    however. They say the case was brought in retaliation for Royal
    Armenia's refusal to engage in a fraud scam with senior customs
    officials and decision to publicly expose widespread corruption within
    the SCC.

    In what may have been a precedent-setting ruling, a Yerevan court of
    first instance fully acquitted the two men on July 16. The unexpected
    development was followed by a meeting between President Robert
    Kocharian and Armenia's leading judges.

    Newspaper reports have said Kocharian expressed his displeasure with
    the acquittal and warned the judges, all of them appointed by him,
    against defying law-enforcement authorities. But according to a
    statement released by the presidential press service, the Royal
    Armenia case was not on the meeting's agenda.

    The prosecutors, meanwhile, stand by their accusations, having taken
    the case to the Court of Appeals. The first hearing there adjourned
    shortly after its start due to the absence of Hakobian and his defense
    counsel. According to Gevorg Minasian, the chief Royal Armenia
    lawyer, the businessman has developed "serious cardiac problems"
    and is currently undergoing treatment in Spain.

    "As a result of spending one year and nine months in jail, his health
    condition has substantially deteriorated," Minasian told RFE/RL.

    "Doctors say his condition is such that he could die at any moment,"
    he claimed.

    The SCC is reputed to be one of the most corrupt government agencies
    in Armenia, with local businessmen routinely complaining about its
    allegedly arbitrary practices. However, most of them avoid going
    public with their grievances for fear of government retribution.

    Royal Armenia is the only private firm which is known to have publicly
    clashed with the customs.
Working...
X