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Armenian Police Say Crime Again Falling

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  • Armenian Police Say Crime Again Falling

    Armenian Police Say Crime Again Falling
    By Nane Atshemian 29/10/2004 08:36

    Radio Free Europe, Czechia
    29 Oct. 2004

    The Armenian police reported on Thursday a 4.4 percent decrease in
    the number of officially registered crimes committed during the first
    nine months of this year.

    The information contrasted with police figures for the first
    half of 2004 that showed a 4.5 percent rise in crime compared
    with the same period last year. "The overall rate of crime has
    tended to decrease during the first nine months of the year," Sayad
    Shirinian, the spokesman for the national Police Service, told a news
    conference. "Also, the percentage of solved cases is higher than it
    was last year."

    It was not clear if the police found a major drop in crime during
    the third quarter of the year. Presenting the first-half figures on
    August 4, the deputy chief of the police, General Ararat Mahtesian,
    admitted that the Armenian government's spring crackdown on the
    opposition left his officers with less time and fewer resources to
    combat crime. The crackdown involved mass detentions of opposition
    activists and a heavy police presence at anti-government rallies.

    Mahtesian also blamed the increased delinquency on Armenia's new,
    more lenient criminal code that came into effect in August 2003. It
    also led to the earlier-than-expected release from jail of more than
    800 convicts.

    According to Shirinian, a total of 8,098 crimes, nearly a third of
    them "serious," were reported to the police from January through the
    end of September. He said despite the overall drop in the number of
    offences there have been more cases of theft, robbery, fraud as well
    as illegal arms and drug possession.

    The official also said that 172 people, 17 of them children, have died
    in 872 road accidents across Armenia this year. "The main causes of
    road accidents continue to be speeding and violations of overtaking
    rules," he said.

    Shirinian added that Armenia's overall rate of delinquency remains
    low by ex-Soviet standards, with an average of 25 crimes per 10,000
    people committed annually. The figure is 143 and 83 in Russia and
    Ukraine respectively.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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