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Ex-Teacher Pleads Guilty In Sex Abuse Trial

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  • Ex-Teacher Pleads Guilty In Sex Abuse Trial

    EX-TEACHER PLEADS GUILTY IN SEX ABUSE TRIAL
    Hasmik Smbatian

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/ar ticle/2040318.html
    12.05.2010

    Armenia -- Levon Avagian, the schoolteacher at the center of a sex
    abuse scandal, speaks at the start of his trial, 26 April 2010.

    A former teacher of a boarding school in Yerevan faced 18 months in
    prison on Wednesday after admitting sexually and physically abusing
    his students during his ongoing high-profile trial.

    Levon Avagian pleaded guilty to corresponding criminal accusations
    following months of strong denial of any improper conduct. As recently
    as last summer, the Armenian police cleared Avagian of any wrongdoing
    and tried to prosecute instead a civic activist who had helped to
    trigger the sex abuse scandal.

    Mariam Sukhudian, a leader of the environment protection group
    SOS Teghut, worked, together with several other young people, as a
    volunteer at the school for children with special needs in April-June
    2008. They said afterwards that some schoolgirls alleged abuse at
    the hands of Avagian.

    Sukhudian videotaped one of those girls and alerted Armenian media
    about her claims in late 2008. The school administration strongly
    denied the allegations.

    Sukhudian was subsequently charged with "false denunciation," a crime
    punishable by up to five years in prison. But in early March, state
    prosecutors ordered the police to drop the extremely controversial
    charge and again turn their attention to Avagian.

    The gray-haired teacher, who left the school located in Yerevan's
    southern Nubarashen suburb last year, was subsequently accused of
    committing "obscene acts against minors" accompanied by violence and
    intimidation. He insisted on his innocence at the start of the trial
    on April 26.

    In a dramatic about-face, Avagian on Wednesday declared that he admits
    his guilt and asked a Yerevan district court to continue the trial
    under a so-called "accelerated procedure" that does not involve a
    public questioning of witnesses and victims. Both the presiding judge
    and the trial prosecutor accepted the request despite protests from
    five former students who testified against Avagian.

    The alleged victims argued that they planned to add new abuse claims
    to their pre-trial testimonies, which could lead to the toughening of
    the charges leveled against their former teacher. "When we studied
    at the Nubarashen school, Mr. Avagian would also beat children. The
    investigators did not ask us questions about that," one of them,
    Hasmik Sinanian, told the court.

    The prosecutor, Karen Batikian, likewise accused Avagian of routinely
    ill-treating and bullying his underage students with methods
    "characteristic of feudal systems." Batikian demanded a 18-month
    prison sentence for the defendant.

    Speaking to RFE/RL's Armenian service afterwards, Sinanian criticized
    the punishment sought by the prosecutor as "too mild." "I think that's
    enough," disagreed another victim, Diana Amirkhanian.

    The Nubarashen scandal has raised more questions about Armenia's
    boarding schools, which are primarily supposed to educate orphans
    and disabled children. They have long been notorious for a lack of
    transparency, poor sanitary conditions and ill-treatment of students.
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