Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Arrested Editor's Brother Brought To Police

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

  • Arrested Editor's Brother Brought To Police

    ARRESTED EDITOR'S BROTHER BROUGHT TO POLICE
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug. 22, 2006

    The brother of a controversially arrested newspaper editor was taken
    to a police precinct on Tuesday morning following a tip-off alleging
    that a person wanted by police was hiding in his apartment.

    Vice-Director of the Skizb Media Ltd. Artak Babajanian, who is the
    brother of "Yerevan Zhamanak" editor Arman Babajanian, later told
    RFE/RL that police officers came to his apartment in Komitas Avenue at
    8:30 am and began knocking at his door and demanding that he open it.

    Babajanian, who had not been notified of the visit by the police or
    invited to the police precinct in advance, had to get in touch with
    his relatives on the phone and make sure that those knocking on the
    door were indeed representatives of the law. He said he opened the
    door only after his relatives confirmed that.

    According to Babajanian, the police workers did not give him any
    explanations, saying that he 'would know everything at the police
    precinct'.

    At 11:00 am, Yerevan Police Department Head Nerses Nazarian explained
    to RFE/RL that police needed to check some information with Babajanian
    and that he would be released soon after.

    Before his release about half an hour later, Babajanian was told that
    he had been brought to the police precinct following an alarm that
    a person wanted by the police lived in his apartment.

    Babajanian signed a paper that he had never been wanted by the police
    before and was released after what appeared to be three hours of
    stress and civil rights violation at the police precinct.

    Two months ago prosecutors arrested his brother Arman Babajanian
    on forgery and draft evasion charges. Despite his representing no
    threat to society, Babajanian, who later partially admitted to the
    charges during the trial, was denied a release on bail pending trial,
    which was denounced by the editors of Armenia's leading newspapers
    as politically motivated.

    Lawyer Zaruhi Postanjian explains that the police did not have
    sufficient grounds for bringing Artak Babajanian to the precinct.

    "Had he been notified in advance that police wanted to question him and
    failed to respond to the subpoena as a witness, accused or suspect,
    the police then would have reasons for taking him to the precinct,"
    she said.
Working...
X