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  • Armenia: Arrest Of Government Critic On Coup Charges Prompts Concern

    ARMENIA: ARREST OF GOVERNMENT CRITIC ON COUP CHARGES PROMPTS CONCERNS
    Onnik Krikorian

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Dec 14 2006

    As political tensions in Armenia rise ahead of next year's
    parliamentary elections, the arrest of a former Nagorno-Karabakh
    military commander critical of the Armenian government's talks
    with Azerbaijan is raising fresh concerns about how the vote will
    be conducted.

    In a December 10 raid carried out by masked agents of Armenia's
    National Security Service (NSS) at a Yerevan restaurant, Zhirayr
    Sefilian, an ethnic Armenian from Lebanon, was taken into custody on
    charges of plotting a government coup. Sefilian, a former commander in
    Armenia's war with Azerbaijan over the predominantly ethnic Armenian
    breakaway territory of Karabakh, is a decorated, hard-line war hero. He
    is an outspoken opponent of any deal with Azerbaijan that includes the
    return of territory currently under Armenian control. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The press service of the NSS, the successor to Armenia's Soviet-era
    State Security Committee (KGB), has alleged that Sefilian "planned
    to interfere in the upcoming political processes [2007 parliamentary
    elections] with the use of force." Sefilian has been accused of
    "conspiring to overthrow the constitutional order" under Article 301
    of the Criminal Code. On December 12, a Yerevan court, in a closed
    session, ruled that Sefilian could be jailed for two months while
    the NSS further investigates the case.

    Pro-opposition media outlets have reported that dozens of members of
    Sefilian's Union of Armenian Volunteers, a small nationalist group
    opposed to concessions with Azerbaijan, were also temporarily detained
    in separate raids.

    Armenia's main opposition parties see the arrest as a warm-up for
    crackdowns against government critics prior to the country's May 2007
    parliamentary elections, or against those who would question the vote's
    conduct. In a December 11 statement, they accused the government
    of resorting to Soviet-style repression to stamp out political
    dissent. The government has not yet responded to the accusation.

    The arrest has also set off alarm bells in nationalist circles,
    which see Sefilian's detention as linked to his position on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations. Recent statements from the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the talks' mediator,
    indicatedthat the basic principles for the resolution of the conflict
    are close to being finalized. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    A December 5 statement from the OSCE after a meeting in Brussels
    between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers urged both
    countries to "double their efforts in the coming year to finalize
    these basic principles as soon as possible."

    Although possible breakthroughs in the negotiations are regularly
    reported, this time a flurry of other reports about a possible deal
    suggest that certain agreements are being reached, albeit behind closed
    doors. Last month, for example, the Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta added fuel to such speculation when it published details of
    what it said was the peace deal currently being discussed by the
    Armenian and Azerbaijani sides. According to that information, as
    well as periodical leaks from both Armenian and Azerbaijani officials,
    most of the seven Azerbaijani regions currently under Armenian control
    surrounding Karabakh would be returned to Baku. A 40-kilometer wide
    "corridor" through the strategic town of Lachin, now known as Berdzor,
    would remain under Armenian control, connecting Karabakh to Armenia
    proper.

    Lending credibility to such speculation are a series of articles
    published this summer by the local and international media,
    including EurasiaNet, reporting that the area around Lachin is
    experiencing a massive exodus of ethnic Armenians. [For details,
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. A few weeks after these reports
    surfaced, Sefilian accused the authorities in Yerevan and Stepanakert
    of pursuing a deliberate policy to clear the region in preparation
    for a concessionary peace deal with Azerbaijan.

    Speaking for the Protection of Liberated Territories organization,
    Sefilian, who holds the rank of a retired lieutenant colonel, alleged
    that the population of what is now called the Kashatagh region by
    Armenians had declined to 7,500. In 2001, the number of settlers
    in what are the Armenian-controlled Lachin, Zangelan and Qubatli
    regions of Azerbaijan was around 15,000. A 2005 census, however,
    put the population at just under 10,000.

    Official sources speaking to EurasiaNet on condition of anonymity
    put the number as low as 6,000.

    In November, other groups of Karabakh war veterans also made similar
    accusations and threatened a campaign of civil disobedience if any
    of these territories were returned to Azerbaijan. A written statement
    by one such group, the Brotherhood of the Liberation Struggle, urged
    all war veterans to unite "to save Armenia and Armenians and restore
    justice in all spheres. The lands that we liberated are in danger
    today. We urge all our compatriots . . . [to] stop our homeland from
    falling into an abyss."

    The Armenian newspaper Zhamanak Yerevan already sees a connection
    between Sefilian's arrest and official fears that Karabakh war
    veterans might involve themselves in political life ahead of next
    year's parliamentary elections. "It was no coincidence that they
    arrested Zhirayr Sefilian, a representative of the defiant section
    of the freedom fighters, on the same day that they advised members
    of the Yerkrapah Union [of Karabakh War Veterans] to stay away from
    politics," the paper wrote on December 12.

    In March 2006, the Iravunk newspaper reported that Sefilian had been
    warned by the NSS to refrain from criticism of the government's
    position, and of Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian, at the risk
    of possible expulsion from the country. Another newspaper, Azg,
    similarly quoted opposition politician Albert Bazeyan as saying that
    "threats [...] to deport Zhirayr Sefilian, former commander of [the]
    Shushi battalion, is conditioned by [...] recent tendencies in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement."

    Undaunted by such threats, Sefilian upped the ante in July by calling
    a press conference in which he declared that a "group of former
    civil guardsmen" had "already agreed upon certain steps which will
    allow us take real and drastic measures to avert vote rigging at the
    coming parliamentary and presidential elections." He also spoke of
    realizing a "power shift to avert the launching of a new military
    conflict with Azerbaijan."

    Following Sefilian's arrest, the NSS issued a written statement stating
    that it had irrefutable proof that the ex-commander was planning an
    armed uprising to "prod the country's opposition into staging violent
    anti-government protests." No evidence to support this claim has yet
    been made available, however.

    Few analysts believe that the Armenian or Azerbaijani presidents
    would risk a nationalist backlash over a deal ahead of sensitive
    parliamentary and presidential polls in both countries during 2007
    and 2008. However, with the lack of public evidence against Sefilian
    and a recent assertion by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev that
    negotiations are entering their final phase, suspicions about the
    authorities' actions continue to grow.

    "I don't exclude the possibility that he was arrested in connection
    with the liberated lands, but I don't think that any document connected
    with Karabakh will be signed in the near future," one of Sefilian's
    associates, Armen Aghaian, stated on December 13.

    Commented opposition parliamentarian Grigor Harutiunian, secretary
    of the People's Party: The government's handling of the case against
    Sefilian provides "the basis for some serious conclusions."

    Editor's Note: Onnik Krikorian is a freelance journalist
    and photographer working for a variety of publications and
    international organizations in Armenia. He has a blog at
    http://oneworld.blogsome.com.
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