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  • Firebombing press freedom

    Firebombing press freedom
    By NIKOL PASHINYAN

    Independent Bangladesh, Bangladesh
    Dec 24 2004

    Armenia

    Late last month, while putting the finishing touches on the next
    edition of our newspaper, Haykakan Zhamanak (The Armenian Times),
    we heard an explosion outside our office. Staff members rushed to
    find my car on fire. That explosion was not unanticipated - nor was
    the announcement by Armenia's police that the car had caught fire
    due to technical problems. But the real problem is censorship, for
    the explosion was but the latest offensive in Armenia's hidden war
    against the press. For us the battle for press freedom began in 1999,
    soon after founding our newspaper, then named Oragir (Diary). It made
    an instant impact, but not in the way we hoped. Throughout 1999 there
    were more court cases against Oragir than against all other Armenian
    media combined since independence in 1991.

    In one case, the prosecutor's office brought criminal charges against
    me as editor-in-chief. I was accused of slandering an Armenian
    political figure and of insulting a state official. As a result, the
    court sentenced me to one year in prison. By a lucky twist, however,
    on the day the court ruled, Lord Russell Johnston, Chairman of the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, was in Armenia. Lord
    Johnston expressed his opinion about my case in his talks with the
    authorities, which then decided not to send me to prison. I remained
    free, only to be monitored by the police.

    A second trial against our newspaper had worse consequences: a $25,000
    fine (a huge sum here) based on allegations that we had damaged the
    reputation of the Mika Armenia Company, controlled by the so-called
    Karabakh clan that helps rule Armenia. The court's verdict was based
    on falsified documents. Following the verdict, bailiffs confiscated our
    equipment, prohibited the publishing house from printing our newspaper,
    and, most importantly, seized our business bank accounts, rendering
    us unable to pay the fine. These events were initiated by a court
    wrangle with Serzh Sargsyan, then the Minister of National Security
    and Internal Affairs. We demanded an apology for his impugning our
    paper's reputation; he accused of us of libel. These manipulations
    worked. Oragir was closed down, which forced us to appear under the
    name Haykakan Zhamanak.

    When my time under police supervision ended, the prosecutor's office
    quickly brought a new criminal case of slander against me. This time,
    Armenia's chief of civil aviation had sued me. Investigations lasted
    several months, before pressure from international organisations and
    public opinion forced the prosecutor to drop the charges. Later,
    after his dismissal from his post, that same civil aviation chief
    confessed that Armenian President Robert Kocharyan had advised
    him to file his lawsuit. At a press conference just hours after my
    car exploded, I announced my suspicion that the explosion had been
    organised by Gagik Tsarukyan, an MP nicknamed "Dodi Gago" ("dod"
    means stupid in Armenian) and one of the country's richest men and a
    close friend of the president's family. Many Armenians believe that
    Tsarukyan has carte blanche to do whatever he wants, when he wants.
    Indeed, he even gets to write his own history. For although Gagik
    Tsarukyan was convicted of a sexual crime in the Soviet era, two
    years ago Armenia's courts exonerated him by vacating the decision of
    the Soviet court. Indeed, there is something of a taboo on writing
    about Tsarukyan, and with good reason: not only is he rich, but
    he also controls an army of obedient skinheads. Armenia frequently
    sees skinheads attacking reporters covering opposition rallies and
    once severely beating a leading opposition politician. Five years
    ago, Tsarukyan himself led his thugs in a break-in at our office,
    taking my staff hostage for several hours. Recently, after reading
    some unflattering articles about him in our paper, Tsarukyan tried
    to invite me to a meeting. I refused. Armenia's paramount oligarch
    fumed. He promised to punish me, and that he would act the next time
    Haykakan Zhamanak criticised any well-known person. The car explosion
    occurred the day after we rebuked Armenia's Police Chief.

    None of us are surprised that the police are unwilling to investigate
    my car's explosion. They began to do so only ten days later, when the
    fire brigade stated that the fire was likely the result of an explosion
    incited by "outside interference." Such harassment is the everyday
    stuff of journalism in what Vladimir Putin calls the "post-Soviet
    space." Armenia may have adopted in 1995 a new Constitution with fine
    phrases about freedom of speech, but both the petty harassments and the
    mortal threats of the Soviet era remain. Of course, we never believed
    that press freedom would come easily. We understood from the start
    that we would have to fight for it everyday. But we never imagined
    the terrifying lengths to which the state - working hand-in-hand with
    the new oligarchic rich - would go to defeat our cause.

    We will not be defeated. An incinerated car is a small price to pay
    in the battle for freedom.

    The writer is Editor-in-chief of Haykakan Zhamanak, an independent
    newspaper in Armenia.
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