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Javakheti Activist Deported From Armenia

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  • Javakheti Activist Deported From Armenia

    JAVAKHETI ACTIVIST DEPORTED FROM ARMENIA
    By Satenik Vantsian in Gyumri

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 4 2006

    An Armenian nationalist activist from Georgia's restive Javakheti
    region was deported from Armenia on Monday shortly after being
    controversially handed a suspended one-year prison sentence in a
    trial denounced as politically motivated by his supporters.

    A court in Gyumri found Vahagn Chakhalian, a young leader of the United
    Javakhk organization campaigning for the Armenian-populated region's
    greater autonomy, guilty of illegally entering Armenia, dismissing
    his protestations of innocence. It backed prosecutors' claim that he
    crossed the Georgian-Armenian border without a valid Georgian passport.

    The court ruled that Chakhalian must return to Yerevan, his temporary
    place of residence, and stay there until the verdict's formal entry
    into force. But witnesses said that as Chakhalian left Gyumri for the
    Armenian capital in a car he was apprehended by police and escorted
    to the Georgian border. His defense lawyer, Tigran Hayrapetian, told
    RFE/RL that local police officers showed him a written deportation
    order signed by the chief of Armenia's national Police Service,
    Lieutenant-General Hayk Harutiunian.

    Chakhalian, 24, was arrested on October 11 just hours after he,
    his parents, brother and another United Javakhk activist arrived in
    Armenia in a car and were reportedly stopped and beaten up by unknown
    men outside Yerevan. The activist, Gurgen Shirinian, sustained severe
    injuries and required hospitalization.

    Chakhalian was released from custody two weeks later amid an outcry
    from a number of Armenian non-governmental organizations and 16
    members of Armenia's parliament. In a joint statement, the mostly
    opposition lawmakers accused the authorities in Yerevan of using the
    case to please the Georgian government which has been at odds with
    United Javakhk.

    The violence and the ensued arrest also infuriated the radical group's
    supporters in Javakheti. Dozens of them marched to the Armenian border
    to demand his release.

    "I repeat that I never illegally crossed the border of the Republic
    of Armenia," Chakhalian said in his concluding court remarks.

    His mother Gayane also testified at the trial, challenging the
    prosecutors to explain why they did not level the same accusations
    against herself and the three other persons that entered Armenia with
    Chakhalian. "Why is it that only one of us is guilty of breaking the
    law?" she said. "Why don't you try me as well?"

    Hayrapetian, for his part, argued that they had no trouble passing
    through the Armenian border and customs checkpoints.

    Chakhalian's sympathizers link the case with United Javakhk's
    rejection of the official results of the October 5 local elections in
    Javakheti that gave victory to Georgia's governing National Movement
    Party. Alleging massive fraud, United Javakhk rallied hundreds of
    supporters in the regional town of Akhalkalaki. The demonstration
    turned violent, with the protesters seizing the local government
    building before being dispersed by police.
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