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Armenia Releases Ex-Foreign Minister From Prison

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  • Armenia Releases Ex-Foreign Minister From Prison

    ARMENIA RELEASES EX-FOREIGN MINISTER FROM PRISON
    Gayane Abrahamyan

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Posted September 10, 2007

    After four months in custody, former Armenian Foreign Minister
    Alexander Arzumanian has been released from prison, though local
    observers are divided over what motivated the decision. Supporters
    have charged that political reasons drove the arrest of Arzumanian,
    an outspoken opposition activist, in the run-up to Armenia's May
    parliamentary elections. Officials have denied the charge.

    The September 7 release came as a surprise to supporters and political
    observers alike. Just one week before, a Yerevan court had approved a
    petition to extend Arzumanian's imprisonment until early November. The
    same court was responsible for releasing him as well.

    Arzumanian, who served as foreign minister under former President
    Levon Ter-Petrossian from 1996-1998, is head of the Civil Disobedience
    Movement non-governmental organization, which has called on Armenians
    not to take part in elections in a bid to remove President Robert
    Kocharian's administration from power. [For details, see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    In an interview with EurasiaNet after his release, Arzumanian, who
    still faces charges of money laundering, called his sudden release
    from jail "a puzzle."

    "If a few days ago they considered that I could obstruct the
    preliminary investigation, what happened within those seven days that
    I cannot obstruct it now?

    It is clear that the case is political and not criminal, and both
    the arrest and the release are political orders," Arzumanian said.

    Under the terms stipulated for his release, Arzumanian has been barred
    from leaving Armenia.

    Official comments in response to the decision have been few. General
    Prosecutor Aghvan Hovsepian told Armenian reporters on September 8
    that given the charges brought against the former foreign minister,
    "I no longer found it advisable to keep Arzumanian in custody."

    An initial statement from the National Security Service following
    Arzumanian's May 7 arrest stated that the ex-foreign minister had
    received "dirty money" from Moscow-based businessman Levon Markos,
    who is wanted by the police for forgery. The NSS suggested that
    the transfer had been made to foster unrest before Armenia's May
    parliamentary elections. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    During investigators' preliminary investigation, however, it was
    established that the money had been transferred to Arzumanian not by
    Markos, but by Russian businessman Sashik Aghazarian, a friend and
    former university classmate of Arzumanian.

    General Prosecutor Hovsepian has stated that Armenian officials are
    still waiting for information from Russian law enforcement agencies
    concerning the money transfer. The process could take a while,
    Hovsepian added.

    Meanwhile, Arzumanian's supporters are drawing their own
    conclusions. "From the very beginning the NSS did not have any grounds,
    only suspicions," commented Arzumanian's lawyer, Hovik Arsenian. "In
    fact, there is no presumption of innocence in this country. Until
    it is established that the person who sent the money got it in an
    illegal, criminal way, there can be no criminal act committed by
    anyone, in particular by Arzumanian," Arsenian said.

    Armenia Helsinki Committee Chairman Avetik Ishkhanian believes
    that the public outcry surrounding the case helped prompt the
    opposition activist's release. "His arrest was a step to intimidate
    the opposition, and his release was simply a forced step," commented
    Ishkhanian. "They tried to fabricate a case, then they understood
    they could not do that." Ishkhanian contends that officials will
    leave the case "in uncertainty for years."

    While attention on the case within Armenia has been sharper than
    abroad, some opposition members contend that "outside pressure"
    also motivated the decision.

    Galust Sahakian, a parliamentarian from the governing Republican Party
    of Armenia, dismissed the charges against the government. "[I]f they
    want to keep Arzumanian in prison, they can do that easily," he said
    in reference to state prosecutors.

    Meanwhile, Arzumanian says that he has no plans to stop his political
    work and will also seek compensation in a local court. A petition
    was filed in early June with the European Court of Human Rights in
    Strasbourg to have Arzumanian's case termed "political prosecution,"
    the Noyan Tapan news agency reported. "I will consider myself a
    person facing political persecution until the case is closed,"
    Arzumanian said.

    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for the independent
    online weekly Armenia Now in Yerevan.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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