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Jailed Nationalist Denies Plotting Violent Regime Change

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  • Jailed Nationalist Denies Plotting Violent Regime Change

    JAILED NATIONALIST DENIES PLOTTING VIOLENT REGIME CHANGE
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 6 2007

    Zhirayr Sefilian, an Armenian nationalist activist controversially
    jailed on coup charges, insists that he never sought to topple
    Armenia's government by force, parliament deputies sympathizing with
    him said on Tuesday.

    The mostly opposition lawmakers campaigning for Sefilian's release
    showed journalists his written answers to their questions relating
    to the politically charged case. The Lebanese-Armenian veteran of
    the war in Nagorno-Karabakh responded to them from his prison cell.

    "It's a ludicrous accusation fabricated on a political order,"
    Sefilian wrote. "I have always spoken of the need for regime change.

    But I can't imagine doing that by means of force or arms because
    there is no need for that."

    "The people hate those several individuals [governing Armenia] so
    much that you just have to organize them a little and the regime will
    collapse. If calling for regime change is a crime, then at least half
    of Armenia's population can be tried on that charge," he said.

    Sefilian and a leading member of a small opposition party, Vartan
    Malkhasian, were arrested and charged last December under Article
    301 of Armenia's Criminal Code that deals with public calls for a
    "violent change constitutional order." The arrests came just days
    after they set up a new organization opposed to Armenian territorial
    concessions to Azerbaijan.

    Armenia's National Security Service (NSS) claims that the group,
    called the Alliance of Armenian Volunteers (HKH), planned to
    mount an armed uprising against the government during this year's
    parliamentary elections. The NSS cites, among other things, Sefilian's
    and Malkhasian's passionate speeches at a December 2 meeting of about
    a hundred HKH activists.

    In his speech, Sefilian threatened to "crack the head of anyone who
    will dare to surrender land" to Azerbaijan. He also scoffed at past
    opposition attempts to force regime change with a campaign of peaceful
    demonstrations. "These people will not quit as a result of peaceful
    demonstrations or external pressure," he said, referring to President
    Robert Kocharian and Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

    The Lebanese national's lawyers insist that the remarks did not
    contain explicit calls for a violent overthrow of the government.

    Some human rights campaigners agree. "I believe that there is nothing
    in the speech punishable by criminal law," said Larisa Alaverdian,
    Armenia's former human rights ombudsperson. "If we open criminal
    cases after every emotional speech, Armenia will become awash with
    political prisoners."

    The opposition deputies, who formed a committee in support of the
    two men, and several prominent intellectuals on Tuesday challenged
    the Armenian authorities to prosecute them as well, publicly putting
    their signatures on the transcript of Sefilian's speech. Armenia's
    leading opposition groups have repeatedly condemned the case as
    politically motivated.

    In his written answers, Sefilian also said he has been personally
    interrogated by the deputy chief of the NSS, Hrachya Harutiunian. He
    claimed: "[Harutiunian] said, 'Why are you doing business with the
    opposition?' Who the hell are they? You don't realize how strong we
    are. We're going to crush them.'"
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