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Police Duck Media Questions On Recent High-Profile Cases

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  • Police Duck Media Questions On Recent High-Profile Cases

    POLICE DUCK MEDIA QUESTIONS ON RECENT HIGH-PROFILE CASES
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    June 15 2007

    Senior police officials avoided talking about recent high-profile
    cases on Friday as they gathered media to present details of a new
    judicial reform.

    Head of the Police Press Service Sayat Shirinian asked reporters in
    advance to ask only questions related to the upcoming changes in the
    prosecutorial system. He added that all unrelated questions would
    not be answered or would be answered vaguely.

    To RFE/RL's question about the results of the internal police probe
    into the death in custody of Levon Gulian last month, Shirinian said:
    "The investigation has not ended yet. It is still in progress."

    Police insist that Levon Gulian, 31, who died under unclear
    circumstances while being interrogated as a murder witness on May 12,
    tried to escape through the window of a second-floor interrogation
    room and accidentally "fell down in the process." The victim's family
    and lawyers, however, do not trust the suicide version and fear a
    cover-up attempt.

    Another question about the dismissal of a senior police official
    earlier this week was also answered vaguely.

    "Let's accept it as a fact. The police system is not stagnant and
    appointments and dismissals happen," Shirinian said, adding that
    Hovannes Varian is in reserve and keeps his rank as lieutenant-general.

    Varian was relieved of his duties as deputy chief of police by
    President Robert Kocharian's decree on Tuesday. No official explanation
    has been made since as for the reasons for firing the official regarded
    as loyal to the regime.

    An Armenian daily newspaper, "Hayk", claimed on Wednesday that
    Varian was fired over a fistfight with his immediate chief, Hayk
    Harutiunian. But the allegations have not been confirmed by any
    official source.

    In presenting the upcoming reform, Police Investigation Department
    Chief Gagik Hambartsumian said that all investigation departments
    will be removed from the prosecutorial system and transferred to
    the police, the defense ministry, the customs committee and the tax
    service. The three-stage reform commencing July 1 will be completed
    by December of this year.

    Hambartsumian hopes the reform will be successful as it will remove
    the existing shortcomings in the system.

    The reforms stem from the amendments introduced in Armenia's
    constitution in 2005, according to which the prosecutor's office no
    longer has powers to conduct investigations, while its functions will
    be limited to oversight.

    Hambartsumian said that Armenia has seen an increased number of
    instituted criminal cases in the first quarter of the year. "Although
    it is sad, this is a tendency currently observed everywhere in the
    world," the major-general said. "Our approach is that if the number
    of crimes grows, then we've had some omissions."
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