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Embattled Journalist Says Locked Out Of Yerevan Home

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  • Embattled Journalist Says Locked Out Of Yerevan Home

    EMBATTLED JOURNALIST SAYS LOCKED OUT OF YEREVAN HOME
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Aug. 10, 2006

    An independent journalist facing the possibility of imprisonment said
    Wednesday that his rented apartment in Yerevan has been sealed off
    by police as part of a controversial criminal investigation stemming
    from his dispute with an influential local government chief.

    Gagik Shamshian, a freelance correspondent and photographer, claimed
    to have been locked out of his home in the city's southern Nubarashen
    suburb since it was searched by police officers last Friday. "They
    broke the door, went in and found that the furniture is not damaged,"
    he told RFE/RL. "They took away my passport, tape recorder with
    cassettes, computer diskettes and back issues of the newspapers
    'Chorrord Ishkhanutyun,' 'Aravot' and '168 Zham.'"

    "I am scared of returning to my apartment and engaging in my
    professional activities," he said.

    A top police general, Hovannes Hunanian, confirmed on Monday that that
    the Nubarashen police opened a criminal case against the journalist
    on the basis of "complaints" filed by local residents. He said they
    accuse Shamshian of defrauding and insulting them.

    Shamshian rejects the accusations, saying that the case was brought
    in retaliation for his refusal to retract incriminating testimony
    against the brother of Nubarashen Mayor Mher Hovannisian who was
    charged with assaulting the journalist last month. Ruben Hovannisian
    spent several days in police custody before being released a week ago.

    Hovannisian's lawyer, Robert Grigorian, denied his client's involvement
    in the July 12 attack on Shamshian by a large group of men allegedly
    linked to the head of the local government. "My client did not organize
    the assault," said Grigorian. "There is no evidence to support these
    allegations."

    A spokesman for the Armenian Police Service confirmed that Shamshian's
    apartment was search but could not elaborate on accusations that may
    be formally leveled against him.

    According to Shamshian, the most important of those accusations is
    that he damaged the furniture owned by his landlord. He said he has
    spent the past few nights in a friend's apartment and does not know
    when he will be able to return home.
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