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Armenia's top prosecutor ends criminal investigation into 1999parlia

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  • Armenia's top prosecutor ends criminal investigation into 1999parlia

    Armenia's top prosecutor ends criminal investigation into 1999 parliament attack
    by AVET DEMOURIAN; Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    November 11, 2004 Thursday 10:14 AM Eastern Time

    Armenia's top prosecutor closed the criminal investigation into
    the 1999 shooting attack on parliament that killed this ex-Soviet
    republic's prime minister and seven other people, a decision that
    some politicians criticized Thursday as premature.

    Prosecutor General Agvan Ovsepian said Wednesday that the five-year-old
    investigation into the organizers of the Oct. 27, 1999, attack was
    being closed because of a lack of information.

    Six gunmen barged into the parliament chamber, shooting then-Prime
    Minister Vazgen Sarkisian, Parliament Speaker Karen Demirchian and
    six other officials and lawmakers. Forty hostages were held overnight
    before the attackers surrendered and released the captives in exchange
    for time on television and promise of a fair trial.

    Alleged leader Nairi Unanian and five others were sentenced to life
    in prison; one later committed suicide.

    The attackers claimed they were saving Armenia from economic collapse
    and official corruption. But the opposition has long suspected a
    political motive since Sarkisian was believed to be moving to sideline
    President Robert Kocharian.

    "As a victim and a witness... I had the impression that the terrorists
    did not act alone and were waiting for help from the outside," said
    Prime Minister Andranik Markarian, who was in the parliament session
    during the terrorist attack.

    He said that steps must be taken to "dispel this suspicion that exists
    among witnesses of the terrorist attack and society."

    Democratic Party leader Aram Sarkisian, whose brother was killed in
    the attack, criticized the prosecutor general's decision, saying
    it was taken "not on a legal basis but political, with the aim to
    forever conceal the organizers."

    Markarian called on anyone who might have additional information to
    provide it to the prosecutor general's office. According to Armenian
    law, criminal cases may be reopened if new information emerges.
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