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Armenian 'Coup Plotters' Go On Trial

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  • Armenian 'Coup Plotters' Go On Trial

    ARMENIAN 'COUP PLOTTERS' GO ON TRIAL
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    July 2 2007

    Two prominent veterans of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh and one of
    their former comrades-in-arms went on a high-profile trial on Monday,
    accused of plotting to overthrow Armenia's government.

    Zhirayr Sefilian and Vartan Malkhasian appeared before a court in
    Yerevan seven months after being arrested on what they and their
    supporters call trumped-up and politically motivated charges.

    Sefilian is a Lebanese citizen of Armenian descent who leads a
    naitonalist pressure group opposed to Armenian concessions to
    Azerbaijan, while Malkhasian is a leader of a small opposition party.

    The two men were arrested by officers of the National Security
    Service (NSS) in December just days after presiding over the founding
    conference of a new organization opposed to the return of any of the
    occupied Azerbaijani territories surrounding Karabakh. Regime change
    in Yerevan is another declared aim of their Union of Armenian Alliance
    (HKH).

    The case against Sefilian and Malkhasian is essentially based on
    statements made by them during the HKH gathering held behind the
    closed doors. They appeared to justify violent actions as a legitimate
    method of struggle against the administration of President Robert
    Kocharian. Publicly calling for a "violent overthrow of the government"
    is a crime in Armenia.

    The third defendant, Vahan Aroyan, was arrested later in December
    after NSS investigators claimed to have found a massive arms cache in
    his village in southern Armenia. The former soldier has since been
    kept under arrest despite reportedly refusing to implicate Sefilian
    in the alleged illegal arms possession.

    The courtroom, packed with supporters of the three men, burst into
    rapturous applause and chants of "Freedom! Freedom!" as Sefilian,
    Malkhasian and Aroyan took their seats in the dock surrounded by
    armed guards. Aroyan wore wartime military uniform.

    Several dozen protesters also gathered outside the court of first
    instance of Yerevan's Kentron and Nor-Marash. Organizers of the protest
    claimed that the authorities want to imprison the three nationalist
    activists due to a presidential election due early next year. "They
    want to prevent consolidation of Armenian volunteers during the
    pre-election period, which could in turn consolidate the opposition
    and seriously threaten the authorities," said Armen Aghayan, another
    HKH leader.

    The first hearing at districts adjourned until July 6 shortly after
    its start, with the defense lawyers demanding the replacement of the
    presiding judge, Mnatsakan Martirosian. They said Martirosian can
    not be impartial because he has repeatedly and ujustly refused to
    release the suspects on bail.

    Just as the trial of the alleged coup plotters got underway, another
    Kentron court judge allowed the NSS to keep Aleksandr Arzumanian,
    a well-known opposition politician charged with being illegally
    financed from abroad, under pre-trial arrest for two more months.

    Following a short hearing held behind the closed doors, the court
    ruled that Arzumanian should remain in detention on the grounds that
    he will obstruct justice if set free now. It also cited continuing
    "investigative actvities" conducted by Armenia's National Security
    Service (NSS) as part of the politically charged criminal case. It
    also ignored a written statement by 19 Armenian parliamentarians who
    guaranteed that Arzumanian would not flee the country.

    Arzumanian's lawyer, Hovik Arsenian, rejected the verdict as
    "unfounded" and pledged to appeal it. He stood by his claims that
    the Armenian successor to the Soviet KGB lacks any evidence to jail
    his client and is artificially dragging out his release.

    There have been no known cases of Armenian courts rejecting arrest
    petitions filed by the ex-KGB.

    Arzumanian 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. Arzumanian, who had served as foreign minister
    from 1996-1998, denies the accusations as politically motivated.
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