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Trial of Armenian pilots in Equa-Guinea to resume in early October

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  • Trial of Armenian pilots in Equa-Guinea to resume in early October

    TRIAL OF ARMENIAN PILOTS IN EQUATORIAL GUINEA TO RESUME IN EARLY OCTOBER

    ArmenPress
    Sept 7 2004

    YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS: In an exclusive interview with
    Armenpress Armenian ambassador to Egypt, Sergey Manaserian, recently
    back from Equatorial Guinea where he attended the trial of six
    Armenian pilots, arrested on charges of involvement in an alleged
    coup to oust that country's president Teodoro Obiang Nguema, said
    the trial, started on August 23, was suspended for one month.

    He said Equatorial Guinea's chief prosecutor, national security
    minister and high officials of the foreign ministry used to say
    that the trial would not run for more than 3-4 days, an opinion
    that was also shared by lawyers and locally deployed diplomats and
    representatives from the South African Republic.

    Manaserian said the South African Nick du Toit, accused of attempting
    to oust the president, was the only one of 19 arrested people for
    whom prosecutors demanded death punishment. He was also the sole
    who admitted to plotting the coup, saying he was to meet the team
    of mercenaries and direct their further moves. He at the same time
    insisted that other arrested 7 South Africans had no connection with
    the plot and were just fulfilling his instructions.

    Manaserian said Armenian pilots were questioned on the third day of
    the trial and the prosecutors' questions referred to their February
    17 flight to Zambia. Their answers made obvious that they had no
    relations to the implicated charges. Nick du Toit in his turn said
    he had no relations with Armenian pilots (one of the charges was
    that Armenians received money from South Africans). Their answers
    were clear and definite despite the prosecutors' attempts to find
    any discrepancy in their testimonies.

    Manaserian said that despite expectations that the presiding judge
    will issue his ruling on August 30, he announced about adjourning the
    trial for one month, as was requested by prosecutors, for collection
    of additional evidence. The ruling was protested by lawyers, who cited
    several international conventions, but without any effect. The trial
    is most likely to resume between October 1 and 7.

    The ambassador also criticized some Armenian mass media for distorted
    coverage of the case, which he said was sometimes jeopardizing the
    pilots' fate. He also expressed his bewilderment that not a single
    Armenian mass media sent a journalist to follow the trial in Malabo,
    the capital of Equatorial Guinea.

    According to the ambassador, no evidence was unveiled at the trial to
    implicate Armenian pilots' involvement in the plot, which he said was
    a serious basis for optimism, but added that "we have to wait until
    the end of the trial."

    On Monday Armenia's foreign ministry denied a report by Agence France
    Presse that a team of investigators from Equatorial Guinea arrived in
    Yerevan to gather more information about six Armenian pilots accused
    of involvement in the alleged plot. Agence France Presse quoted an
    unnamed `legal official' in the country's capital Malabo as saying
    that the investigators flew to Armenia to probe links between the
    suspected coup plotters and an Armenian airline whose pilots have
    been kept in Equato-Guinean custody since March.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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