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Coup Plotters To Appeal Verdicts At Highest Court

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  • Coup Plotters To Appeal Verdicts At Highest Court

    'COUP PLOTTERS' TO APPEAL VERDICTS AT HIGHEST COURT
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 8 2007

    The lawyers of two prominent veterans of the Karabakh war are going
    to appeal to Armenia's highest judicial instance to overturn the
    prison sentences passed on their clients by a district court and
    later upheld by the court of appeals.

    Ara Zakarian and Mushegh Shushanian, however, say they "clearly
    realize that chances that the Court of Cassation will take up their
    cases are slim considering the political implications involved."

    On September 25, Armenia's Court of Appeals upheld prison sentences
    handed to Zhirayr Sefilian and Vartan Malkhasian, who were arrested
    late last year for allegedly plotting to overthrow the government.

    Both were charged with publicly calling for violent regime change
    shortly after setting up a pressure group opposing Armenian territorial
    concessions to Azerbaijan.

    Only Malkhasian was convicted of the coup charge and sentenced to
    two years in prison. Sefilian was handed an 18-month jail term under
    another article of the penal code dealing with illegal arms possession.

    By Armenia law, defense counsel have six month to take the appeal to
    the court of cassation, but Zakarian says "we will not wait that long."

    "We'll present the case much sooner. Currently, we are working for
    our appeals to be as substantiated as possible so that the court will
    have no grounds to refuse to open proceedings."

    The defense counsel pledge consistent efforts for Sefilian and
    Malkhasian to be released on parole, which, they say, is the convicts'
    right by law.

    "We present it as a demand and not a request. Sefilian and Malkhasian
    will never show obedience to make a request to be pardoned or
    released," Zakarian said.

    By law, chief wardens of penitentiaries are to submit written
    applications for their inmates to the parole committee. The latest
    meeting of the committee that meets on a regular basis took place on
    October 5, but no such application was considered. The next meeting
    is in six months, about the time Sefilian will have served his
    prison term.

    "It confirms our assumptions that there is a clear program to keep my
    client in jail until the [presidential] election is over," Sefilian's
    lawyer says.
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