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Jailed Editor Blames Kocharian For Parole Rejection

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  • Jailed Editor Blames Kocharian For Parole Rejection

    JAILED EDITOR BLAMES KOCHARIAN FOR PAROLE REJECTION
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 1 2007

    Arman Babajanian, the jailed editor of the pro-opposition newspaper
    "Zhamanak Yerevan," claimed on Wednesday that President Robert
    Kocharian is personally responsible for his failure to secure an
    early release from prison.

    Babajanian went on a brief hunger strike late last month in protest
    against a state commission's rejection of his request to be set free
    on parole. Under Armenian law, he is eligible for parole, seeing as
    he has already served more than one third of a three-and-a-half-year
    prison sentence which he received for draft evasion.

    The commission in question was formed by Kocharian in July 2006 and
    is headed by Hovannes Hunanian, deputy chief of the Armenian police.

    It gave no reason for its decision to keep the 31-year-old editor
    behind bars despite a positive recommendation from the administration
    of Yerevan's Nubarashen prison.

    "It is obvious that the decision was made as a result of a political
    order," Babajanian told RFE/RL in a prison hospital where he was
    taken on Monday after complaining of high blood pressure and other
    health problems.

    "Instructions on my case come directly from the presidential
    administration," he said. "The president of the republic is
    consistently trying to avenge activities against these authorities
    which I began in Los Angeles in 2003 ... continued in my country
    [in 2006.]"

    "The decision not to grant me early release underscores the pettiness
    and weakness of these authorities," he charged.

    Babajanian was arrested and charged with forging documents to evade
    compulsory military service in June 2006, just weeks after returning
    to Armenia from the United States where had lived for the past eight
    years. During his subsequent trial he admitted resorting to fraud
    after failing to extend the deferment of his military service but
    said he did so after military authorities unjustly dismissed medical
    documents testifying to his poor health.

    Babajanian and his newspaper staff have repeatedly condemned the case
    as an attempt to intimidate and muzzle a publication highly critical
    of Kocharian and his government. The Armenian authorities deny this,
    arguing that the editor's guilt has been proven.

    Local and foreign human rights groups point out, however, that draft
    dodgers in Armenia usually get shorter jail terms. The rejection of
    Babajanian's parole application only added to the perceived political
    dimension of the case.

    Babajanian said on Wednesday that the Kocharian-appointed commission
    must not have decided his fate in this first place because it was
    set up one month after his arrest. A Yerevan court is due to consider
    this month a relevant lawsuit filed by his lawyers. The latter also
    appealed earlier this year to the European Court of Human Rights to
    overturn their client's conviction.
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