Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kocharian, Sarkisian Deny Harassing Pro-Opposition Tycoon

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

  • Kocharian, Sarkisian Deny Harassing Pro-Opposition Tycoon

    KOCHARIAN, SARKISIAN DENY HARASSING PRO-OPPOSITION TYCOON
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian and Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Nov 14 2007

    President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian denied
    on Wednesday any political motives behind the Armenian government's
    controversial crackdown on a wealthy businessman supporting former
    President Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    Both men claimed that tax authorities have been inspecting companies
    owned by Khachatur Sukiasian only because the latter has grossly
    understated their revenues to evade taxes. Kocharian said the State
    Tax Service (STS) will soon publicize proof of how Sukiasian has
    "deceived the Republic of Armenia."

    "There are people who understand that the state has adopted an
    anti-corruption strategy and is consistent," Kocharian told reporters
    after opening an annual exhibition of goods produced by Armenian and
    foreign firms. "There are also people who do not want to reduce the
    shadowy segment of their business and are trying to politicize the
    matter, make noise and, to put it bluntly, become hysterical in order
    to pay less money to the [state] budget."

    "That hysteria will not do them any good," he warned.

    Sarkisian, for his part, insisted that the government actions against
    businesses making up Sukiasian's SIL Group are a "very ordinary
    inspection" which every company operating in Armenia undergoes on a
    regular basis.

    Speaking in parliament, he deplored the growing outcry sparked those
    actions. "Do you think that a person must not be taxed just because
    he is engaged in politics?" he asked an opposition lawmaker.

    Tax inspectors, joined by officers of a feared police unit tasked
    with combating organized crime, began raiding the offices of
    Sukiasian-controlled companies last month following the tycoon's
    public endorsement of Ter-Petrosian's bid to unseat the current
    Armenian leadership and return to power. The most recent such raid
    was reported on Tuesday.

    The STS has already accused a Sukiasian-owned pizza restaurant chain
    and printing house of evading a combined 1.36 billion drams ($4.25
    million) in taxes. One of their chief executives is currently under
    arrest pending investigation.

    In an interview with RFE/RL last week, Sukiasian denied the tax evasion
    accusations, saying that they were fabricated in retaliation for his
    long-standing support for Ter-Petrosian. The ex-president and his
    opposition allies have also condemned the crackdown as being part of
    "repressions" unleashed against their supporters by the authorities
    ahead of next February's presidential election.

    There are indications that Western governments are also worried about
    political implications of the affair. A spokeswoman for SIL Group
    told RFE/RL that Steven Banks, the number two diplomat at the U.S.

    embassy in Armenia, visited Sukiasian to discuss the situation on
    Wednesday. The embattled tycoon has reportedly also received other
    Western diplomats in Yerevan in recent days.

    Sukiasian is the only millionaire businessman who has thrown his weight
    behind Ter-Petrosian's presidential bid. Virtually all other local
    "oligarchs" are loyal to Kocharian and Sarkisian. Many are affiliated
    with Sarkisian's Republican Party (HHK).

    Kocharian insisted that the government moved against SIL Group as
    part of a toughening of its stated fight against the huge informal
    sector of the Armenian economy. "As you know, we are pursuing a
    much more consistent tax policy towards all companies," he said,
    answering a question from RFE/RL. "All businessmen, whether they are,
    as you say, pro-government or in opposition, are being brought into
    the taxation field."

    "At the end of the year we will publish the list of the large
    taxpayers and you will see by how much everyone has increased their
    tax contributions," he added.

    Sarkisian likewise cited a "toughening of the government's tax policy"
    towards all businesses. "That is the first precondition for creating
    a level competition field," he said, answering a question from Anahit
    Bakhshian, an opposition parliamentarian concerned about the crackdown.

    "I would love to trust in your every word. But unfortunately, Mr.

    Prime Minister, reality testifies to something else," responded
    Bakhshian.

    Even though many Armenian companies are believed to routinely
    underreport their earnings, SIL Group is the only major economic
    entity targeted by the tax authorities so far. Sukiasian's business
    interests, although extensive, do not encompass the most lucrative
    forms of economic activity that have been effectively monopolized by
    other, even wealthier businessmen close to Kocharian and Sarkisian.

    Modest taxes paid by those businessmen continue to contrast with
    their conspicuous wealth.

    Sarkisian assured Bakhshian that his wealthy friends and allies do not
    evade taxes, urging her to examine the list of the country's leading
    corporate taxpayers regularly published by the STS. A newspaper
    reporter told him afterwards that one of Armenia's two big cement
    plants owned by Mikael Baghdasarov, one of the country's richest men
    reputedly operating under the powerful premier's tutelage, is currently
    not listed even among the 500 largest taxpayers. Sarkisian responded
    by claiming that he has never had close ties with Baghdasarov.
Working...
X