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  • Armenia: journalists defiant after attacks

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR
    May 22 2009


    ARMENIA: JOURNALISTS DEFIANT AFTER NEW ATTACKS


    Recent attacks on journalists underline media's struggle to report
    freely on politics and business.

    By Gayane Mkrtchian in Yerevan

    Armenian rights activists fear two attacks on prominent journalists in
    the last three weeks could be a sign of new attempts to restrict
    freedom of information in their country.

    Argishti Kivirian, editor-in-chief of the news agencies Armenia Today
    and Bagin.info, was attacked in the stairwell of his house on April
    30, only just managing to force his assailants' gun into the air
    before three shots were fired.

    Just a week later, Nver Mnatsakanian, a political commentator from the
    Shant television channel, was also beaten as he walked into the block
    of flats were he lived.

    These two high-profile attacks are added to a list of 18 other
    assaults on journalists compiled last year by human rights activists,
    which paint a picture of a country where the press struggles to report
    freely on politics and business.

    `If the criminals are punished on time then maybe we can avoid this
    atmosphere of impunity, which we have at the moment. There are cases
    which are so close to being solved, and then unexpectedly they reach a
    dead end,' said Avetik Ishkhanian, the head of the Armenian Helsinki
    Commission.

    The attack on Kivirian was clearly well-planned, according to evidence
    from his wife Lusine Sahakian, a lawyer who has worked defending
    opposition figures.

    `It was five o'clock in the morning, when I heard a noise coming from
    the ground floor. We opened the day and ran down by the stairs,
    shouting his name `Argishti, Argishti'. I knew that he had been
    threatened,' she said. As she reached the first floor, she said she
    heard three shots.

    `My husband says that he heard the noise of steps coming closer, and
    then one of the attackers said `kill him'. Argishti managed to push
    the pistol upwards, and it fired into the air.'

    Kivirian's two news agencies have no relation to the authorities, and
    they have recently been very active in covering problems in southern
    Georgia, which has a large Armenian minority that can cause friction
    between the two neighbouring countries. The news agencies promised
    that the attack would not halt their work.

    `We can assure you that Armenia Today and Bagun.info will continue to
    uncover serious themes and will not stop raising current
    problems. Attempts to make us be quiet are pointless,' the agencies
    said in a joint statement.

    Just a week later, on May 7, unknown men attacked Mnatsakanian. Such
    an assault, on a well-known figure in the country, shocked many
    Armenians. Mnatsakanian, who has no connection to the opposition,
    himself struggled to give an explanation for what had happened.

    `I can say nothing. You could connect it to anything in our
    activities. I have never had and do not have any connection to
    business or to anything,' he told Radio Liberty.

    In a news conference the next day, Colonel Hovhannes Tamanian, of the
    Armenian police, said all steps would be taken to solve the two
    crimes. `Crimes against journalists defame the great work that we do
    elsewhere. We will do all that we can to solve these crimes. I ask you
    to trust me and to believe that we will take all steps to prevent such
    things happening again,' he said.

    His criticism of the attacks was repeated by Armenian prime minister
    Tigran Sargsian who strongly condemned such violence on May 13.

    `And sadly, violence is not only used against journalists. These
    circumstances can create serious danger. Therefore, we are organising
    discussions about possible additional measures and reforms, which
    could deal with this negative tendency,' he said.

    Tamanian's figures for assaults on journalists are very different to
    those published by rights activists. He said there have been only 17
    attacks since 1992, and of these three had been solved. But activists
    say even this minute figure is exaggerated.

    One of the cases listed as solved was the attack last year on Edik
    Baghdasarian, the chairman of the Investigative Journalists
    Organisation, and editor-in-chief of the website hetq.am.

    He was badly beaten on November 17, 2008, when three unknown men
    attacked him near his office without warning or explanation. He
    resisted them until he was smashed over the head with a rock. His
    attackers took an expensive television camera, and he only managed to
    gain help when he crawled to a nearby building.

    `If Tamanian thinks that my case is solved, then he either understands
    nothing of jurisprudence, or has absolutely no conception of it. They
    arrested some person, who refuses to give evidence, and is probably
    being quiet by orders coming from above. Anyway, he is quiet, and he
    has a perfect right to this. That makes it a lot easier to hide the
    name of the person who ordered the attack,' said Baghdasarian.

    And human rights groups accuse the authorities of taking the assault
    on Kivirian with a similar lack of seriousness. Prosecutors initially
    viewed it as a minor assault, and only upgraded it to a probe into
    attempted murder after three weeks.

    Gagik Shamshian, a photographer who reached the scene of the attack
    just half an hour after it happened, has a series of photographs that
    clearly show the brass cartridge cases expelled by the pistol used in
    the assault.

    Kivirian's wife is also baffled by how the police, who must have seen
    the cartridge cases, took so long to classify the case as attempted
    murder.

    `What happened to the cartridges from the bullets? How could they say
    that they heard no shots, and that the victim did not see a pistol
    himself,' she asked.

    The contradictions between the official accounts and that of the
    victims in these attacks have concerned international
    observers. Ambassador Sergey Kapinos, the head of the office of the
    Organisation of Security and Cooperation in Europe, was harsh in his
    criticism.

    `The recent repeated cases of violent assault against media
    professionals have marred the current media freedom situation in
    Armenia,' he said.

    `The lack of results in cases of violence against journalists creates
    an atmosphere of impunity for the perpetrators and can provoke other
    cases of violence against media workers.'

    In the meantime, Kivirian and his wife are planning to put in a
    request for the right to carry a gun.

    `We live in a country in which we cannot feel ourselves protected,
    therefore we are forced to count only on self-defence. Let's see if in
    this country only oligarchs and criminals are allowed to carry
    weapons, and whether decent people are also given this right,' said
    Sahakian.

    Gayane Mkrtchian is a journalist with Armenianow.com.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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