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Police 'Probing' Government Critic's Beating

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  • Police 'Probing' Government Critic's Beating

    POLICE 'PROBING' GOVERNMENT CRITIC'S BEATING
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    May 7 2007

    Police said on Monday they are investigating claims by a well-known
    government critic that he was kidnapped and badly beaten by bodyguards
    of Gagik Tsarukian for publicly scorning Armenia's reputedly wealthiest
    businessman close to President Robert Kocharian.

    Shahen Petrosian, a former head of the Armenian government's Civil
    Aviation Department, was reportedly beaten unconscious on Thursday
    night following an argument with Tsarukian supporters in a rock club
    in downtown Yerevan. Petrosian says he infuriated them by suggesting
    sarcastically that the club owners post pictures of Dodi Gago,
    Tsarukian's nickname commonly used by many Armenians. In his words,
    three well-built men with shaven heads arrived at the nightspot and
    forced him out shortly afterwards.

    "They hit me in the street, pushed me into their car, and then beat
    inside it for about two hours," Petrosian told RFE/RL, adding that
    he was apparently unconscious when they dumped him on a deserted
    roadside just outside the city center.

    Petrosian, whose bruised face bore the traces of severe beating,
    claimed that the attackers were led by Tsarukian's chief bodyguard
    whom journalists known his first name, Edo. "I have seen their pictures
    on the Internet," he said.

    Tsarukian's intimidating security guards have been implicated in recent
    years in mafia-style shootouts, beatings of opposition politicians
    and other violent incidents that sparked a public resonance. However,
    the tycoon strongly denied involvement in the attack as he briefly
    spoke to RFE/RL during a campaign rally in Yerevan staged by his
    Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK). He said Petrosian quarreled in the
    club with young Diaspora Armenians who have no connection with him.

    Petrosian, who is a supporter of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian
    and highly critical of Kocharian, lodged a formal complaint with the
    Armenian police on Saturday. A spokesman said the national Police
    Service is looking into the allegations and has yet to decide whether
    to launch criminal proceedings in connection with the incident.

    Tsarukian, whose party is tipped to make a strong showing in the May
    12 elections, is known to take offense from being referred to as Dodi
    Gago. The precise meaning and origin of the unflattering nickname is
    a matter of contention.

    Nonetheless, Petrosian defended his public use of the nickname. "He
    used to be proud of his nickname," he said. "Why he is renouncing
    his heritage now? ... This is how 99.9 percent of Armenians call him."
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