Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

F18News: Armenia - Not illegal deportation, merely illegal removal

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • F18News: Armenia - Not illegal deportation, merely illegal removal

    The right to believe, to worship and witness
    The right to change one's belief or religion
    The right to join together and express one's belief

    =================================================

    Tuesday 17 May 2005
    ARMENIA: NOT ILLEGAL DEPORTATION, MERELY ILLEGAL REMOVAL

    Jehovah's Witness conscientious objector Armen Grigoryan faces a six year
    jail sentence, after his illegal deportation from his own country,
    Armenia, and his refusal to do military service in the unrecognised
    Nagorno-Karabakh republic, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. But Armenia's
    Human Rights Ombudsperson, Larisa Alaverdyan, denied to Forum 18 that
    Grigoryan had been deported. "You can't call it illegal deportation
    - there's no such term. I'm a specialist on this. Perhaps it might
    have been illegal removal from the country." She defended what she
    claimed was the right of the Armenian Defence Ministry to send Armenian
    citizens to Nagorno-Karabakh, which international law regards as part of
    Azerbaijan. Armenia continues to break its promises to the Council of
    Europe to free conscientious objectors and introduce a civilian
    alternative to military service, with both Baptists and Jehovah's
    Witnesses being beaten up and jailed for this.

    ARMENIA: NOT ILLEGAL DEPORTATION, MERELY ILLEGAL REMOVAL

    By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service

    Jehovah's Witness conscientious objector Armen Grigoryan, illegally
    deported from his Armenian homeland to the unrecognised Nagorno-Karabakh
    republic, is facing imprisonment of up to six years if found guilty of
    desertion and refusing to perform his military duties, his lawyer Rustam
    Khachatryan told Forum 18 News Service from the Armenian capital Yerevan
    on 16 May. Mher Shageldyan, who chairs the Defence Committee of Armenia's
    parliament, said he was not familiar with the case, but would investigate.
    "This is absolutely unreal," he told Forum 18 on 17 May.
    "No-one has the right to deport an Armenian citizen from Armenia
    - that's clear."

    However, Larisa Alaverdyan, Armenia's Human Rights Ombudsperson, denied
    that Grigoryan had been deported. "You can't call it illegal
    deportation - there's no such term. I'm a specialist on this,"
    she told Forum 18 from Yerevan on 17 May. "Perhaps it might have been
    illegal removal from the country, I don't know. We'll have to seek official
    information on this from the Ministry of Defence."

    She defended what she saw as the right of the Armenian defence ministry to
    send Armenian citizens to Nagorno-Karabakh, which international law regards
    as part of Azerbaijan. "It's where the Armenian army serves so it has
    every right to send personnel there."

    Grigoryan, who refused military service after being called up, was
    summoned to the military recruitment office in Yerevan under a pretext on
    21 June 2004. Within 24 hours and against his will he had been taken out
    of Armenia and transferred to a military unit across the border in
    Nagorno-Karabakh. On refusing to swear the military oath and sing the
    national anthem for religious reasons at a base in Martuni region of
    eastern Karabakh, he was beaten. He was later stripped and forced to stand
    in his underwear in front of about 1,800 soldiers to tell them why he
    refused to do military service. He escaped from his unit and fled back to
    Armenia last August (see F18News 6 January 2005
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=484).

    Within the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, the authorities have
    beaten up and imprisoned Baptists and Jehovah's Witnesses who have refused
    on religious grounds to do military service with weapons (see F18News 6
    January http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=483 , 22 February
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=517 and 15 April 2005
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id =544).

    Grigoryan's lawyer, Rustam Khachatryan, told Forum 18 that Grigoryan
    decided to give himself in and the two went to the police in Yerevan on 28
    April. He was immediately arrested and taken to Stepanakert in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, where he is being held in solitary confinement in an
    investigation cell. A criminal case was instigated under Article 362(1) of
    the Armenian criminal code, which punishes desertion with a prison term of
    up to four years, and Article 364(1), which punishes refusal to perform
    military duties with up to two years' imprisonment. (Nagorno-Karabakh uses
    Armenia's criminal code.)

    Khachatryan said the criminal case has been completed and Grigoryan's
    trial is due to start at Stepanakert city court on 27 May under Judge
    Atayan. "The charges are baseless," Khachatryan told Forum 18.
    "The authorities deceived Grigoryan and took him to Nagorno-Karabakh
    illegally. They don't have the right to hold him, a citizen of Armenia,
    and put him on trial."

    Khachatryan was sceptical about the claim of Mher Shahgeldyan, chairman of
    the parliamentary Defence Committee, that he did not know about the case.
    "The whole of Armenia knows about this case," Khachatryan told
    Forum 18.

    Alaverdyan, the Human Rights Ombudsperson, insisted she has been in
    frequent contact with Grigoryan's father, who has visited her office
    almost weekly. "At the father's request we met the chief military
    prosecutor and he declared that Grigoryan had refused military service
    once he had already been conscripted," she told Forum 18. "I
    requested him to soften the penalty on human grounds in any way he
    could." She said she had been away since then and was not up to date
    on the latest developments.

    Despite commitments to the Council of Europe that it would end the
    imprisonment of conscientious objectors and introduce a civilian
    alternative to military service, Armenia has failed to do so (see F18News
    19 October 2004 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=434).
    Nineteen Jehovah's Witnesses are still in prison for refusing military
    service on grounds of conscience. Both of the alternative services
    introduced in 2004 - non-combat military service and labour service
    - are under the control of the defence ministry, and so do not meet
    Armenia's Council of Europe commitments. The alternative labour service is
    punitive in length, three and a half years instead of two years normal
    military service.

    Of the 24 young men who opted for the alternative labour service last
    year, 22 were Jehovah's Witnesses who believed assurances by officials
    that it was in fact civilian. Many have expressed concern about the terms
    of the service. Vahe Grigoryan, Garazat Azatyan, Hayk Khachatryan and
    Garik Melkonyan, who were assigned to Vardenis psychiatric hospital,
    object particularly that they have to wear military-style uniforms, carry
    identity cards marked "Armed Forces of the Republic of Armenia",
    are regularly visited by military police and are given degrading work where
    they are treated as soldiers. They are even fed by the military.

    Some have now abandoned this alternative service, risking prosecution.
    "My conscience would not permit me to continue under these
    conditions," one declared. When Narek Alaverdyan and Arsen Sevoyan,
    refused to continue their alternative service on 6 May in Kapan they were
    immediately arrested by the military police. Khachatryan told Forum 18 no
    date has yet been set for their trial.

    "It was under pressure from the Council of Europe that alternative
    labour service was included into the law besides the military
    alternative," Avetik Ishkhanyan, who chairs the Armenian Helsinki
    Committee, told the ArmeniaNow news website. "However, this is not a
    civilian service and contradicts the European standards." He says the
    authorities are trying to cheat Europe by presenting military-controlled
    labour service as civilian service.

    Both Alaverdyan and Shahgeldyan deny this. "The law does provide for
    civilian service," Shahgeldyan told Forum 18 from the Armenian
    parliament. "Since it was adopted some 25 or 30 religious and wider
    pacifist objectors have begun performing this alternative service."
    He denied that those doing alternative service are under military control
    and claimed that the military commissions that assign alternative service
    conscripts to their places of work are made up solely of civilians.

    But he insists parliament is going to look again at the alternative
    service law in the light of concerns by non-governmental organisations to
    see if it meets international standards. He gave no timescale for this.

    Shahgeldyan told Forum 18 he knows that Armenia sentenced conscientious
    objectors to prison before the alternative service law was introduced last
    year. "This didn't help the army or society," he maintained.
    However, he said he was unaware that 19 Jehovah's Witnesses arrested both
    before and after the adoption of the law are now in prison. He said he
    would study a list of names sent to him by Forum 18.

    Armenia's failure to keep its promises to the Council of Europe to free
    religious prisoners of conscience, imprisoned for conscientious objection,
    continues. March 2005 saw five Jehovah's Witnesses sentenced to between one
    and two years in prison (see F18News 21 March 2005
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=528), with two more jailed
    in April.

    Three Jehovah's Witnesses have appealed to the European Court of Human
    Rights in Strasbourg against their earlier convictions for refusing
    military service. In one case, that of Vahan Bayatyan who lodged his
    application in October 2003, the Armenian government has to provide the
    court with its written response to its questions on the case by 26 May.

    A printer-friendly map of Armenia is available at
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=armeni
    and a printer-friendly map of the
    disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh is available at
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&R ootmap=azerba
    within the map titled 'Azerbaijan'. (END)

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855

    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/

    --Boundary_(ID_lC7Sf5rVHULrPR9/EQ/sBg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X