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Jailed Businessmen Acquitted In Landmark Ruling

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  • Jailed Businessmen Acquitted In Landmark Ruling

    JAILED BUSINESSMEN ACQUITTED IN LANDMARK RULING
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 16 2007

    In a landmark ruling, a court in Yerevan acquitted and set free on
    Monday two businessmen who were arrested nearly two years ago after
    publicly alleging high-level corruption in the Armenian customs.

    Gagik Hakobian, a leading shareholder in the coffee processing and
    packaging company Royal Armenia, and its deputy director Aram Ghazarian
    walked free in the court after being unexpectedly cleared of smuggling,
    tax evasion and fraud.

    The two men were arrested in October 2005 at the height of Royal
    Armenia's bitter dispute with the State Customs Committee (SCC).

    Hakobian had repeatedly claimed in the months leading up to the
    arrest that his company is being illegally penalized by the SCC for
    its refusal to engage in a scam that would have benefited two senior
    customs officials.

    The SCC has dismissed the corruption allegations, saying that Royal
    Armenia itself illegally avoided paying more than 1 billion drams
    ($3 million) worth of taxes and import duties.

    The embattled company has strongly denied this. Its representatives
    have said all along that the criminal case was "fabricated" by
    Armenia's National Security Service (NSS) in retaliation for its
    high-profile spat with the customs service. The latter is headed by
    a figure close to Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

    The NSS stood by the grave accusations throughout the eight-month
    trial, demanding that Hakobian and Ghazarian be sentenced to 12
    and 11 years in prison respectively. The case was largely based on
    incriminating testimony given by Vache Petrosian, a U.S. citizen and
    former Royal Armenia supplier.

    However, the court of first instance of Yerevan's Kentron and Nork
    Marash districts found the charges baseless and acquitted the
    defendants on all counts. It also ordered prosecutors to launch
    criminal proceedings against Petrosian, saying that he falsely
    incriminated his former business partners.

    It was apparently the first major court defeat ever suffered by the
    Armenian successor to the Soviet KGB. The feared security agency
    has until now had little difficulty securing guilty verdicts by
    Armenian judges.

    Gevorg Minasian, the chief Royal Armenia lawyer, said he was surprised
    by the full acquittal, which many of those present in the courtroom
    greeted with rapturous applause. "I though that the court will likely
    come up with a compromise solution that will somehow satisfy both us
    and those who fabricated this case," he told RFE/RL.

    "But to our surprise, justice prevailed in full."

    "The trial showed that my clients are 100 percent innocent," said
    Minasian.

    "The trial showed that the whole thing was trumped up," agreed Ashot
    Sargsian, another defense lawyer. "I am surprised that there can be
    just verdicts in this country."

    Prosecutors who represented the NSS at the trial think otherwise,
    though. A spokeswoman for the Prosecutor-General's Office told RFE/RL
    that they will appeal the ruling.

    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. In
    fact, Royal Armenia is the only private firm which is known to have
    publicly clashed with the SCC.

    The dispute stems from the SCC's discretionary power to determine
    the market value of imported commodities before levying a fixed 10
    percent duty from them. It broke out more than two years ago when
    Royal Armenia charged that the deputy chief of the customs, Gagik
    Khachatrian, and another senior official offered the company to
    grossly undervalue the price of its imported coffee beans in return
    for sharing in the resulting extra profits.
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