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High Court Refuses To Free Oppositionist

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  • High Court Refuses To Free Oppositionist

    HIGH COURT REFUSES TO FREE OPPOSITIONIST
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech rep.
    May 24 2007

    Armenia's Court of Appeals on Thursday refused to release former
    Foreign Minister Aleksandr Arzumanian from jail pending investigation
    into the allegedly illegal financing of his anti-government political
    activities.

    It upheld a lower court's decision earlier this month to allow the
    National Security Service (NSS) to keep the outspoken opposition
    politician under two-month arrest. The NSS claims that he illegally
    received cash from a fugitive Russian businessman of Armenian origin
    and will impede its criminal investigation if set free.

    Arzumanian's lawyer, Hovik Arsenian, condemned the ruling, accusing
    the high court of following "political orders," rather than the law.

    Arsenian said NSS investigators told him that his client will be
    released on bail if he agrees to give testimony.

    "I consider that humiliating," the lawyer told RFE/RL. "He is making
    use of his constitutional right [not to testify.]"

    Arzumanian was arrested on May 7 and remanded in pre-trial detention
    three days later over the alleged financing of his Civil Resistance
    Movement by Levon Markos, a Russian-Armenian businessman at odds with
    the Armenian government. The arrest came two days after NSS officers
    searched his Yerevan apartment and confiscated $55,4000 kept there.

    They also confiscated a comparable amount of cash from the Yerevan
    apartment of Vahan Shirkhanian, another movement leader and former
    government minister. But unlike Arzumanian, Shirkhanian has not been
    charged with attempts to "legalize revenues obtained by criminal
    means." Both men deny having been funded by Markos.

    "I join my client in declaring that the whole thing is a political
    order," said Arsenian. "He hasn't done anything illicit."

    Arzumanian's American wife, Melissa Brown, was also present at the
    court session. She said she would like to meet President Robert
    Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and ask them to explain
    why her husband was arrested. She told RFE/RL: "Everyone asks, 'Why
    did they arrest Alik?' I say, 'Don't ask me, ask them.' I too would
    like to ask them."

    Brown and other relatives of Arzumanian issued a statement last week
    condemning the case as politically motivated and asking his "friends
    and colleagues in Armenia and abroad" to help secure his release.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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