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  • Former Armenian Security Chief Dies

    FORMER ARMENIAN SECURITY CHIEF DIES
    Emil Danielyan

    Armenialiberty.org
    Sept 7 2009

    Armenia -- Grigori Sarkisian, former head of the State Protection
    Service who died on September 7, 2009.

    A once powerful security official who was close to former President
    Robert Kocharian and reportedly played a major part in his harsh 2008
    crackdown on the Armenian opposition died of a heart attack early
    on Monday.

    A spokesman for Kocharian told RFE/RL that General Grigori Sarkisian,
    the former head of the State Protection Service (SPS), passed away in
    his Yerevan home in the early hours of the morning. News reports said
    ambulance crews rushed there failed to save the 53-year-old's life.

    A native of Nagorno-Karabakh, Sarkisian headed the agency, responsible
    for the personal security of Armenia's most high-ranking government
    officials, from its establishment in early 2004 until May last year. He
    had previously been only in charge of Kocharian's security detail.

    Armenia -- Grigori Sarkisian, former head of the State Protection
    Service, stands behind President Robert Kocharian during an official
    ceremony in Yerevan.Sarkisian gained considerable political and
    economic clout during Kocharian's decade-long rule, reportedly becoming
    one of the second Armenian president's most important associates. He
    is believed to have been actively involved in the bloody suppression
    of anti-government demonstrations staged by Kocharian's predecessor
    Levon Ter-Petrosian in the wake of the disputed presidential election
    February 2008. In particular, he was present at the pre-dawn dispersal
    on March 1, 2008 of Ter-Petrosian's tent camp set up in Yerevan's
    Liberty Square.

    Ter-Petrosian, whose bodyguards are also officially listed as SPS
    employees, refused to leave the square and was forcibly driven home
    and placed under de facto house arrest by security officers. The
    opposition leader claimed afterwards that the SPS chief personally
    twisted his arms and pushed him into his limousine. Sarkisian denied
    that, saying that he went to Liberty Square to ensure Ter-Petrosian's
    security and had nothing to do with the violent dispersal of more
    than 1,000 opposition supporters camped there.

    Ter-Petrosian also said that he negotiated with Kocharian later
    on March 1 through Sarkisian. The talks failed to prevent the
    more violent late-night clashes between opposition supporters and
    security forces which left ten people dead and more than 200 others
    injured. Ter-Petrosian's Armenian National Congress (HAK) regards
    Sarkisian as one of the main organizers of the "slaughter."

    The SPS chief's sacking in May 2008 was one of the first major
    personnel changes made by Kocharian's successor Serzh Sarkisian
    (no relation to Grigori). The move followed media reports about
    mounting friction between Grigori Sarkisian and Vache Ghazarian,
    a fellow Karabakh Armenian who has long been responsible for the
    current Armenian president's security.

    Kocharian's bodyguards earned notoriety in September 2001 when they
    beat to death a man in a Yerevan café who greeted the then president
    in a way which they found offensive. Only one of them was subsequently
    prosecuted and given a suspended one-year jail sentence in connection
    with the incident.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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