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Arrested Oppositionist's Wife Waiting For "Promised" Meeting With Pr

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  • Arrested Oppositionist's Wife Waiting For "Promised" Meeting With Pr

    ARRESTED OPPOSITIONIST'S WIFE WAITING FOR 'PROMISED' MEETING WITH PREMIER
    By Shake Avoyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 13 2007

    The American wife of an arrested oppositionist says she is still
    waiting for a meeting with the prime minister promised to her a
    week ago.

    Melissa Brown, the spouse of Alexander Arzumanian, told reporters
    on Wednesday that she had not yet received any response from Serzh
    Sarkisian despite his staff member's promise on his behalf.

    Last week, members of a civil group set up in defense of the ex-foreign
    minister, who was arrested on money laundering charges last month, held
    a demonstration of protest near the government building demanding his
    immediate release. A government representative who came out to meet
    the protestors said then that in the coming days the prime minister
    could receive only Arzumanian's wife.

    The U.S. citizen, who claims that her husband is a political prisoner,
    said that she and three other activists had prepared formal letters to
    be sent out to all foreign diplomats and international organizations
    in Armenia.

    "In the letter we request a meeting during which we will have a small
    conversation about this incident to try to get them to recognize Alex
    [Arzumanian] as a political prisoner and assist us as far as they can,"
    Brown said, presenting the contents of the letter.

    Arzumanian, who served as foreign minister under Armenia's former
    administration, has been kept at the jail of Armenia's National
    Security Service since May 7 on charges of illegally receiving a
    large amount of money from a fugitive Russian businessman of Armenian
    descent. His arrest came two days after law-enforcers searched his
    Yerevan apartment and confiscated $55,4000 kept there.

    Late last month Armenia's Court of Appeals refused to release
    Arzumanian from jail pending investigation, thus upholding a lower
    court's decision to allow the national security service to keep the
    outspoken opposition politician under two-month arrest.

    Civil rights activist Vartan Harutiunian says Arzumanian is kept in
    custody for several reasons, including for founding a movement of
    disobedience last autumn and for his position on the Karabakh conflict
    settlement in the top diplomat's capacity, which he is known to have
    retained since resigning in the late 1990s.

    Arzumanian has lodged a case with the European Court of Human Rights
    in which he asserts he is being kept in custody illegally and discards
    the charges leveled at him as fabricated.

    Arzumanian's loyalists say the case at the European Court will be
    continued even if he is released any time soon.

    Edik Baghdasarian, the head of the Association of Investigative
    Journalists, expresses bewilderment that Arzumanian has to be proving
    his innocence, while it is the job of the investigation bodies to
    find and provide the evidence of his guilt.

    Armenia Helsinki Committee President Avetik Ishkhanian says it is
    the society rather than the state that determines whether a person
    kept in custody is a political prisoner or not.

    "Any state will deny having political prisoners. Instead they call
    them all criminals," he told RFE/RL. "It was the case in the Soviet
    Union, in post-communist countries, and now it is the case in Cuba
    and other undemocratic countries."
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