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Court Halts Trial Of Ex-MP

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  • Court Halts Trial Of Ex-MP

    COURT HALTS TRIAL OF EX-MP
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    June 19 2007

    A controversial businessman and former parliamentarian who reportedly
    provoked a mass brawl outside Yerevan last fall secured on Tuesday an
    indefinite suspension of his trial thanks to his allegedly poor health.

    Hakob Hakobian, who is affiliated with the governing Republican Party
    of Armenia (HHK), went on trial in the southern town in Artashat last
    month on charges of "hooliganism," tax evasion and other financial
    irregularities. The high-profile case was brought last October
    immediately after fellow lawmakers agreed to lift his legal immunity
    from prosecution. The parliament's decision was in turn prompted
    by a violent incident in a village just south of Yerevan involving
    Hakobian and his loyalists.

    They reportedly stormed a local gas distribution facility that cut
    supplies to nearby liquefied gas stations owned by Hakobian. The
    pro-government businessman, better known as Choyt, was detained on the
    spot and kept in custody for three days. He has denied responsibility
    for the violence, saying that he arrived at the scene stop a "manly
    fight" between security guards and local residents.

    Hakobian, who was controversially barred from contesting the May
    12 parliamentary elections, has failed to attend any of the court
    hearings on the case so far, citing serious health problems. His
    defense counsel, Mkrtich Vasakian, submitted to the Artashat court
    on Tuesday a written statement by a Yerevan hospital saying that
    Hakobian is suffering from a number of cardiac diseases and should
    be spared the need to attend court hearings for at least three months.

    The presiding judge, Gagik Sargsian, said the hospital reaffirmed this
    assertion in response to a formal inquiry filed by the court. He said
    the criminal proceedings against Hakobian will therefore be suspended
    "until his recuperation."

    The trial prosecutor, Vardges Gevorgian, did not protest against this
    decision after the judge agreed to press ahead with the prosecution
    of seven other defendants connected to Hakobian. They will now be
    tried separately.

    Speaking to RFE/RL, Vasakian insisted that his burly client is really
    sick and needs a reprieve. He said he is confident that the judge's
    final verdict on Hakobian will be "fair."

    The fraud charges leveled against Hakobian stem from his business
    activities of the past 15 years. The former lawmaker, who is no
    stranger to controversy, has vehemently denied them as well.

    Addressing the National Assembly last October, he implicitly alleged
    that he was not prosecuted earlier because he has for years bribed
    law-enforcement and tax officials inspecting his businesses.
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