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Armenian Intellectuals Condemn Killings Of Armenians In Russia

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  • Armenian Intellectuals Condemn Killings Of Armenians In Russia

    ARMENIAN INTELLECTUALS CONDEMN KILLINGS OF ARMENIANS IN RUSSIA

    Armenpress
    Nov 15 2006

    YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS: Levon Ananian, the chairman of the
    Union of Armenian Writers said today murders of Armenians in Russia
    were either induced by racial hate or were a political order. He said
    protests of Armenia were ignored by Russian law-enforcement agencies
    and the bulk of hate crimes committed against Armenians in Russia
    remained undisclosed.

    "We have to register that Armenians in the modern world are being
    killed only in Russia and Azerbaijan," he said. He was speaking at a
    gathering that was prompted by another brutal murder of an Armenian
    boy in the Moscow region on November 11. Narek Kocharian, a native
    of Armenia, was stabbed to death on a railway platform.

    The majority of speakers argued that murders of ethnic Armenians in
    Russia were a political order.

    'The Russian government is capable of controlling its skinheads. When
    such crimes are committed against Azeris or Tajiks the perpetrators
    are revealed hours later," one of the speakers alleged. An art critic,
    Henrik Igitian, spoke against calls urging to cut friendly relations
    with Russia saying it would be followed by the pullout of Russian
    military base from Armenia which many Armenians perceive as the
    strongest guarantee of their national security. Igitian argued that
    Armenia must press for a broad coverage of such murders by Russian
    media and demand that Russian media condemn hate crimes.

    Mrs. Hranush Kharatian, head of a government division in charge of
    religious and national minorities issues, said Russian officials are
    well aware of the hate crimes against Armenians but they are also
    aware of Armenians' impotence and dependence on Russia. She said this
    question must be raised officially within the CIS agreements. At the
    end of their conference intellectuals suggested writing a letter to
    Russia's president Vladimir Putin urging him to take swift action to
    stop hate crimes in Russia.

    In a related development Russian interior minister Rashid Nurgaliyev
    was quoted by RIA news agency as saying they were seriously concerned
    over the fast rise in extremism-related crime, driven by racial
    intolerance. He said his ministry was currently monitoring 150
    extremist groups across Russia, mainly race-hate groups, which have
    a total membership of around 10,000.

    Human rights groups have raised concerns over a surge in
    racially-motivated violence Russia in recent months, and cite
    widespread xenophobic attitudes in the country. About 80% of the
    extremist groups' members are under 30, and most are based in Moscow,
    St. Petersburg, and the Samara and Voronezh regions, according to
    Russian ministry data. Eight of these organizations pose a real threat
    to public security, Nurgaliyev said.

    The minister earlier said that youth extremist groups have become
    more aggressive and better organized, and that some are influenced
    by criminal organizations.

    Ella Pamfilova, the head of the presidential council on civil society
    institutions and human rights, said laws should be toughened to
    eliminate legal loopholes, through which race-hate crimes are
    registered as 'hooliganism', or no criminal cases are opened at all.
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