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Armenia Thwarted Lebanese Threat

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  • Armenia Thwarted Lebanese Threat

    ARMENIA THWARTED LEBANESE THREAT
    by Ara Tatevosjan

    Source: Kommersant, December 12, 2006, p. 10
    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    December 15, 2006 Friday

    Posed by a visiting veteran of the conflict in Karabakh

    CONSPIRACY BLOWN IN ARMENIA; Armenian secret services claim prevention
    of external meddling in "political processes".

    The Armenian National Security Service (NSS) reports arrest of one
    Gerard Sefiljan of Lebanon who planned "illegal interference by force
    in the forthcoming political processes in Armenia."

    Sefiljan, leader of the non-governmental organization Armenian
    Volunteer Union, was taken in on Sunday night. Some weapons were
    confiscated as illegally possessed. Sefiljan's accomplice Vardan
    Malhasjan was arrested as well. Armenian secret services maintain that
    the Armenian Volunteer Union convened a secret meeting on December 2,
    where its leaders suggested removal of the existing regime by force
    and even came up with a specific plan of accomplishing it. A source
    in the NSS Press Service claims that "we have irrefutable evidence
    that the Armenian Volunteer Union, an organization lacking official
    registration, intended illegal interference by force in the forthcoming
    political processes in Armenia and planned some radical action on the
    eve of the parliamentary election in 2007." The said "radical action"
    would have come down to encouraging the Armenian opposition to convene
    unsanctioned protest actions, clashes with law enforcement agencies,
    and other suchlike activities.

    Once a member of Dashnaktsutyun who chose to remain in Lebanon
    after the Karabakh war since his appeals to Yerevan for Armenian
    citizenship were turned down, Sefiljan is a dedicated critic of the
    Armenian powers-that-be. He branded Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanjan as
    "promoter of an ideology of slaves" in early 2004, and later said that
    "existence of a country like Azerbaijan in the region is certainly
    harmful." "My associates and I will prevent self-reproduction of the
    Armenian regime in the forthcoming election," Sefiljan was quoted as
    saying this summer. His associates are therefore convinced that the
    authorities decided to take Sefiljan out of the picture now to spare
    themselves trouble at a later date.

    Armenian Volunteer Front activists are convinced as well that there
    may be some connection between Sefiljan's arrest and the process of
    Karabakh conflict resolution. They refer to the scenario in accordance
    with which Azerbaijan will put up with a referendum on the status in
    Nagorno-Karabakh in return for liberation of the occupied territories.

    Awarded the Combat Cross for participation in the Karabakh war,
    Sefiljan is coordinator of the Organization for the Liberated
    Territories, a structure established by war veterans. Its activists
    are dead set against the return to Azerbaijan of the territories that
    surround Karabakh and serve as a security belt.

    Official Baku in the meantime was perplexed to hear of a
    connection between Sefiljan's arrest and his views on the problem of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. This correspondent was told in the Armenian Foreign
    Ministry that "the negotiations are not in their final phase yet,
    and all these speculations on the return of the territories are but
    theoretizations."

    Sefiljan and Malhasjan are facing charges under the article of the
    Criminal Code pertaining "public calls to topple the constitutional
    regime in the Republic of Armenia". They may draw either a fine or
    three years imprisonment. Sefiljan is a foreigner, however, and will
    probably be deported from the country after the trial.
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