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NGO Head Flees Over 'Stupid Oversight'

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  • NGO Head Flees Over 'Stupid Oversight'

    NGO HEAD FLEES OVER 'STUPID OVERSIGHT'
    by David Nowak, Staff Writer

    The Moscow Times
    June 21, 2007 Thursday

    On Jan. 21, Manana Aslamazian walked through customs at Sheremetyevo
    Airport with a little more undeclared cash than is allowed.

    Five months later, she faces a decade or more in prison, and the
    nongovernmental organization she heads -- the Educated Media Foundation
    -- is in tatters.

    Little wonder that Aslamazian is on extended vacation in Paris.

    "I am going to work in America, Asia, Africa and Europe, pay my
    taxes in Russia, and wait until the court finally figures out why
    my personal mistake, for which I am ready to accept a fair and
    appropriate penalty, became the excuse for suspending the work of
    a large organization that brought a lot of benefit to the country,"
    the Armenian-born Russian said in a statement.

    The Educated Media Foundation is a U.S.-funded NGO that trains
    journalists, including those from state-connected media such as
    NTV television.

    Aslamazian could not be reached Wednesday, but her lawyer Viktor
    Parshutkin said she would not be back in Russia until authorities
    dropped the charges, which he in turn called "absolute rubbish,"
    "a joke," and "politically motivated."

    Aslamazian has acknowledged her guilt from day one, calling her
    airport transgression a "stupid oversight."

    After stepping off a flight from Paris, she failed to declare the 9,550
    euros -- which she said were a debt collected from a friend in France
    -- in her bag. Any amount worth more than $10,000 must be declared.

    In Aslamazian's case, that was around $2,400 too much. Aslamazian's
    money and documents were confiscated at the airport.

    Three months later, about 20 officers from the Interior Ministry's
    economic crime department arrived at the NGO's offices in central
    Moscow with orders to search the premises and seize all documents
    and computers.

    Aslamazian said at the time that the officers had told her the
    search was linked to a criminal investigation into the Sheremetyevo
    incident. No further explanation was given, she said.

    Then last month, tax authorities froze the NGO's bank accounts,
    citing incorrectly filed tax reports. Again, Aslamazian rejected the
    charges as a coordinated effort to shut the group down.

    Moscow's Golovinsky District Court is expected to rule Thursday on the
    legality of the raid. During a hearing Wednesday, lawyer Parshutkin
    learned for the first time that his client had been officially charged
    with smuggling, which carries a maximum five-year sentence.

    Interior Ministry investigative committee official Natalya Vinogradova,
    who was acting as a prosecutor in court, said Aslamazian was charged
    on June 15, Parshutkin said.

    "We have never received a piece of paper with any charges," Parshutkin
    said.

    He said he met Vinogradova on June 13 and she had asked to arrange
    a meeting with Aslamazian. Partushkin said that was not possible.

    Vinogradova could not be reached for comment late Wednesday.

    Aslamazian could be hit with even more charges. Vinogradova told
    the court Wednesday that she had found evidence of illegal business
    activity and money laundering after inspecting computers and documents
    seized from the NGO's office in April, Parshutkin said.

    "Vinogradova said she sent the material to the Prosecutor General's
    Office for further examination. It's absolute rubbish," he said.

    Convictions in all three charges could result in a prison sentence
    of more than 10 years.

    Court officials could not be reached for comment late Wednesday. But
    Igor Tsokolov, head of the investigative committee of the ministry's
    organized crime department, told Kommersant in comments published
    Wednesday that authorities were ready to charge Aslamazian with a
    "gross violation" of the Criminal Code.

    Aslamazian, Parshutkin and more than 2,000 media professionals recently
    signed an open letter to President Vladimir Putin that complains
    authorities view the foundation as a threat to Kremlin-friendly
    reportage.

    Parshutkin said Wednesday that authorities knew full well the April
    raid was illegal. "Because of that, no court wants to deal with this
    case," he said. "Everyone is passing the buck."

    The Golovinsky District Court handed the case to the Savyolovsky
    District Court because it was closer to the foundation's offices and
    therefore within its jurisdiction. After a delay to the case in May,
    it was inexplicably sent back to the Golovinsky District Court.

    A spokesman at the Prosecutor General's Office, which is to examine the
    computers and documents for evidence of money laundering and illegal
    business activity, referred all questions to the Interior Ministry.

    Pavel Klimovsky, a ministry spokesman, first said he knew nothing of
    the case and later declined immediate comment.

    The NGO law was tightened last year after Putin said he would not
    tolerate foreign funds being used for political activities. The new
    NGO law increased the amount of paperwork that NGOs must keep and
    required them to reregister under stringent new guidelines.

    Foreign-connected NGOs played key roles in regime changes in Georgia
    in 2003 and Ukraine in 2004.

    The skeletal staff that remains at the Educated Media Foundation,
    the legal successor of Internews, say all financial transactions have
    been meticulously documented.
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