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Margaryan Killing: Preliminary inquiry nears its end

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  • Margaryan Killing: Preliminary inquiry nears its end

    Margaryan Killing: Preliminary inquiry nears its end
    30 April 2004


    By Zhanna Alexanyan
    ArmeniaNow.com reporter

    The lawyer for the family of Gurgen Margaryan has been in Budapest for
    consultations on the case against the Azerbaijani officer accused of
    murdering him.

    Nazeli Vardanyan, a member of the Armenian International Lawyers Union, met
    with her Hungarian colleague Gabriela Gaspar to familiarize herself with
    details of the preliminary investigation.

    Vardanyan is representing the interests of the legal successors of
    Margaryan, the Armenian officer violently murdered on February 19 while
    attending a NATO Partnership for Peace training program in Budapest. She
    also represents a second Armenian officer, Hayk Makuchyan, who is recognized
    as a victim in the case.

    The preliminary inquiry is expected to be completed within two to three
    weeks. Senior Lieutenant Ramil Sarafov, one of two Azerbaijani officers
    attending the same NATO program, is accused of hacking Margaryan to death
    with an axe while he slept and of attempting to murder Makuchyan. The
    soldiers were attending NATO's "Partners for Peace" conference.

    Vardanyan received her legal education in Yerevan and completed postgraduate
    study at the Institute of State and Law Studies of the Russian Academy of
    Sciences in Moscow . She is also a graduate of the American University of
    Armenia. An international law specialist, Vardanyan speaks English and
    German.

    Tigran Janoyan, head of the union, which is providing legal support to
    Vardanyan, states that Sarafov allegedly murdered Margaryan then tried to
    break into Makuchyan's room. The preliminary investigation has recorded that
    marks from a sharp-edged instrument were found around the door latch and
    that the Azeri officer called to Makuchyan to come out of his room.

    "Both of them were recognized as victims and the most important is that the
    crime was directed only against Armenian citizens. The national factor, the
    fact of being Armenian, was the motive for the crime," says Janoyan.

    Immediately after the incident, Azerbaijani authorities sought to classify
    it as a simple dispute. Janoyan says: "So far, the investigation hasn't
    managed to collect any information showing there to have been a conflict
    between the Azeri and Armenian officers or demonstration of antipathy."

    The attorney believes that the Azeri side is seeking to cloak a criminal act
    in the imagery of national heroism by developing a hypothesis of revenge for
    deaths in Khojalu during the war in Nagorno Karabakh.

    "This contradiction is also clear to Hungarian authorities, particularly to
    the body in charge of the preliminary investigation. If they try to turn the
    trial into a political show, I think we will also be ready to present the
    reality of the Khojalu events," says Janoyan, underlining that at present
    the Armenian side has no desire to leave the legal field.

    He says the investigation found that "the axe recognized as the weapon was
    purchased in advance, about two weeks before the incident in Budapest".

    According to a statement from the second Azeri officer who attended the NATO
    meeting, Safarov "purchased the axe as a souvenir for his father". Janoyan
    questions whether the huge instrument - 65 centimeters long, with a blade
    measuring 17 by 12 - was really "the best souvenir to bring from Hungary to
    the Southern Caucasus".

    He argues: "Safarov planned cruel crimes against Armenian officers. He
    purchased the crime instrument, chose a residential section of the
    educational building and step by step committed the crime. The murder of the
    second Armenian officer didn't take place as a result of circumstances over
    which the criminal couldn't establish control."

    The scene of the crime has been thoroughly examined. Traces of blood
    allegedly left by the criminal while searching for Makuchyan's room were
    registered.

    Hungarian law provides 10 to 15 years or life imprisonment for murder. The
    court has yet to decide whether the trial will be public. If he is
    convicted, the possibility of Sarafov being transferred to his homeland to
    serve his sentence is not excluded.

    "Azerbaijan and Hungary have signed a convention on extradition of convicted
    persons, although it doesn't require mandatory extradition. The Hungarian
    side must decide whether to extradite him or not," says Vardanyan. " Hungary
    is preparing to join the European Union on May 1 and I don't think there
    will be any pressure on the court because they want to prove to the world
    that they are ready to be a member of this structure. We are not passive, in
    our turn, to allow pressure to be exerted."
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