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Jailed Oppositionist Faces Another Arrest Extension

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  • Jailed Oppositionist Faces Another Arrest Extension

    JAILED OPPOSITIONIST FACES ANOTHER ARREST EXTENSION
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Libery, Czech Rep.
    Aug 28 2007

    The Armenian authorities have decided to keep Aleksandr Arzumanian,
    a prominent opposition politician controversially charged with being
    illegally financed from abroad, under arrest for two more months,
    his lawyer said on Tuesday.

    Hovik Arsenian told RFE/RL that he was informed about that by officers
    of the National Security Service (NSS) handling the politically charged
    case. He said they will ask a court in Yerevan to extend Arzumanian's
    pre-trial detention, which is due to expire on September 7, by another
    two months.

    The court is expected to grant the request, having twice allowed the
    NSS to keep him in its basement jail pending investigation into what
    the Armenian successor to the Soviet KGB views as money laundering.

    Arzumanian, who had served as Armenia's foreign minister from
    1996-1998, was arrested on May 7 on charges of illegally receiving a
    large amount of money from Levon Markos, a fugitive Russian businessman
    of Armenian descent. His arrest came two days after NSS officers
    searched his Yerevan apartment and confiscated $55,400 worth of cash
    kept there.

    They also confiscated a comparable amount of cash from the Yerevan
    apartment of Vahan Shirkhanian, another prominent oppositionist. But
    unlike Arzumanian, Shirkhanian was not accused of attempting to
    "legalize revenues obtained by criminal means."

    The two men co-head the Civil Resistance Movement, a small opposition
    group campaigning for regime change in the country. They both deny
    being financed by Markos, dismissing the case as politically motivated.

    According to Arsenian, the NSS will tell the court that it needs
    time to investigate claims by a Moscow-based friend of Arzumanian,
    Aleksandr Aghazarian, that he is the one who sent the money to the
    former minister. He said the ex-KGB has asked Russian prosecutors
    to certify the veracity of the claims and look into the legality
    of Aghazarian's revenues. The lawyer dismissed the justification
    as "illegal and pathetic," saying that it violates his client's
    constitutionally guaranteed presumption of innocence.
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