Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Watchdog Concerned About Death In Armenian Police Custody

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Watchdog Concerned About Death In Armenian Police Custody

    WATCHDOG CONCERNED ABOUT DEATH IN ARMENIAN POLICE CUSTODY
    By Ruzanna Stepanian and Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 18 2007

    An international human rights organization has joined its Armenian
    counterparts in demanding a "thorough and independent" inquiry into
    last week's death in police custody of a young man widely regarded
    as the latest victim of police brutality in Armenia.

    Levon Gulian died on Saturday while being questioned at the Armenian
    police headquarters as a presumed witness of a deadly shooting that
    took place outside his Yerevan restaurant earlier last week. The
    police claimed that during the interrogation he tried to escape
    through a window but slipped and fell to his death from the second
    floor of the police building.

    Gulian's family vehemently rejected this theory, saying that
    the 30-year-old father of two was tortured to death by police
    investigators. Family members say his body carries numerous traces of
    violence and will not be buried until it is examined by independent
    forensic experts. More than a dozen of them, joined by Armenian human
    rights and other civic activists, demonstrated outside the national
    Police Service on Tuesday.

    "We will go to the end," said Gulian's sister Armine. "We will do
    everything to have the guilty punished."

    "I suspect that Levon's death was caused by torture. Let the police
    prove the opposite," Artak Kirakosian of the Civil Society Institute,
    told an ensued news conference.

    Aaron Rhodes, executive director of the International Helsinki
    Federation for Human Rights (IHF), described these suspicions as
    "legitimate" in a letter to Lieutenant-General Hayk Harutiunian,
    chief of the Police Service, sent on Thursday. Rhodes cited a "past
    record of suspicious cases of death in police custody in Armenia
    and the fact that torture and ill-treatment by the police remain
    serious problems." He urged Harutiunian to "ensure that all the
    circumstances leading to [Gulian's] death be investigated thoroughly
    and independently."

    The outcry already forced Harutiunian to order earlier this week an
    internal police inquiry into the extraordinary incident, which is
    also being investigated by Armenian prosecutors. The Office of the
    Prosecutor-General launched a criminal case under an article of the
    Armenian Criminal Code that deals with cases where individuals are
    forced to commit suicide.

    The dead man's relatives fear this is a sign that the prosecutors
    will clear the police of any wrongdoing. They wrote to Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian on Tuesday, asking him to prevent what they see as
    a high-level cover-up.

    Sarkisian assured reporters on Wednesday that he took the relatives'
    concerns seriously. "Once the [police] inquiry is over, relevant
    bodies will provide information to the public," he said.

    Gulian was the owner of a restaurant in Yerevan's southern Shengavit
    district near which a man was shot dead on May 9 in a reported dispute
    between two groups of unknown individuals. Gulian was detained and
    questioned for two days at Shengavit's police department. He was set
    free only to be again arrested by the Police Service's Directorate
    General of Criminal Investigations. Family members say Gulian told
    them that he was badly mistreated by the Shengavit police before being
    driven to his last interrogation by Hovik Tamamian, deputy chief of
    the feared police unit.

    Tamamian is known as a figure close to President Robert Kocharian who
    played a major role in a 2004 government crackdown on the Armenian
    opposition. He was sacked as chief of central Yerevan's police
    department and given his current post last year, reportedly under
    pressure from the police leadership.

    Sayad Shirinian, the chief police spokesman, chided the press on
    Wednesday for "speculating" about Tamamian's possible involvement
    in the man's death. "If it is established that Hovik Tamamian was
    involved, all of us will condemn him," he said.

    According to local and Western watchdogs, torture and mistreatment
    in custody are the most common form of human rights violations in
    Armenia. The practice seems to have continued unabated since the
    Armenian parliament's ratification in 2002 of the European Convention
    for the Prevention of Torture and the European Convention on Human
    Rights.
Working...
X