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Arrested Oppositionist Condemns 'Political Persecution'

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  • Arrested Oppositionist Condemns 'Political Persecution'

    ARRESTED OPPOSITIONIST CONDEMNS 'POLITICAL PERSECUTION'
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 29 2007

    Aleksandr Arzumanian, a prominent opposition politician charged with
    money laundering, remained adamant in denying any wrongdoing and
    alleging political motives behind his controversial arrest as he
    spoke to RFE/RL in a maximum-security prison in Yerevan on Tuesday.

    "I repeat that I never did anything illicit," he said. "This is
    political persecution."

    Arzumanian has been kept in the basement jail of Armenia's National
    Security Service for the past three weeks on charges of illegally
    receiving a large amount of money from Levon Markos, a fugitive Russian
    businessman of Armenian descent. His arrest came two days after NSS
    officers of 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 prominent oppositionist. But
    unlike Arzumanian, Shirkhanian was not accused of attempting to
    "legalize revenues obtained by criminal means."

    The two men used to held senior positions in government and now
    co-ahead the Civil Resistance Movement, a small opposition group
    campaigning for regime change in the country. They both deny being
    financed by Markos.

    Arzumanian, who had served as Armenia's foreign minister from
    1996-1998, claimed that he was arrested because President Robert
    Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian were worried about street
    protests staged by other opposition groups. "The authorities were in
    total panic before the elections as the wave of protests was gaining
    momentum and demonstrations were growing bigger," he said.

    "During the nearly one month that I have been here I have not faced
    any questions or [investigative] actions. I was simply isolated. They
    themselves have probably understood that they have no facts," added
    the former minister.

    Arzumanian's lawyer, Hovik Arsenian, similarly claimed that a
    seven-member team of NSS investigators tasked with the case is
    essentially idle. He said they have failed, in particular, to
    investigate media reports quoting another ethnic Armenian citizen of
    Russia as admitting that he is the one who sent the confiscated cash to
    Arzumanian. The man, identified as Aleksandr Aghazarian, was reported
    to have revealed his address and offered the NSS to question him.
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