SAFAROV DID NOT REPENT OF HIS CRIME
PanARMENIAN.Net
18.04.2006 22:34 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ At the last session of the Budapest court Azeri army
officer Ramil Safarov, charged in murder of Armenian army lieutenant
Gurgen Margaryan, never repented of the crime he had committed, lawyer
Nazeli Vardanyan stated at a news conference in Yerevan. In her words,
Safarov explained the crime by "losing control" of himself.
At that she noted that the defense of the Armenian party was more
competent, that that of Azerbaijan. "We refused from politicization
of the process from the very beginning, while Azeris kept speaking
about the political underlying reasons of the murder, the war,
ancient culture of Azerbaijan. In response to it Hungarian judge
Andras Vaskuti noted he did not know a country, whose culture admits
an inhuman murder," Vardanyan underscored.
"It was a fierce inhuman crime on the national ground, planned in
advance and aimed not only against Armenia, but also Hungary," Nazeli
Vardanyan cited the words of Prosecutor Veronica Kis.
As of the appeal, according to Hungarian laws, it can be applied
for in three days after announcement of the sentence. "The Court
of Appeal considers only the course of the trial in compliance with
the documents.
If it is discontent with anything, a new trial is assigned. However,
I do not think this is possible," Vardanyan said.
From: Baghdasarian
PanARMENIAN.Net
18.04.2006 22:34 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ At the last session of the Budapest court Azeri army
officer Ramil Safarov, charged in murder of Armenian army lieutenant
Gurgen Margaryan, never repented of the crime he had committed, lawyer
Nazeli Vardanyan stated at a news conference in Yerevan. In her words,
Safarov explained the crime by "losing control" of himself.
At that she noted that the defense of the Armenian party was more
competent, that that of Azerbaijan. "We refused from politicization
of the process from the very beginning, while Azeris kept speaking
about the political underlying reasons of the murder, the war,
ancient culture of Azerbaijan. In response to it Hungarian judge
Andras Vaskuti noted he did not know a country, whose culture admits
an inhuman murder," Vardanyan underscored.
"It was a fierce inhuman crime on the national ground, planned in
advance and aimed not only against Armenia, but also Hungary," Nazeli
Vardanyan cited the words of Prosecutor Veronica Kis.
As of the appeal, according to Hungarian laws, it can be applied
for in three days after announcement of the sentence. "The Court
of Appeal considers only the course of the trial in compliance with
the documents.
If it is discontent with anything, a new trial is assigned. However,
I do not think this is possible," Vardanyan said.
From: Baghdasarian