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  • For Acquitted Armenian Soldiers Justice Not Quite Done

    FOR ACQUITTED ARMENIAN SOLDIERS JUSTICE NOT QUITE DONE
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 25 2006

    The three Armenian soldiers who have been sensationally cleared
    of murder charges will push for the prosecution of law-enforcement
    officials and judges that nearly condemned them to a life behind bars,
    it emerged on Monday.

    Zaruhi Postanjian, a young lawyer who has led their prolonged battle
    with the state security apparatus, said that her clients will seek
    "material and moral compensation" for spending about three years in
    jail on what human rights groups consider trumped-up charges. She said
    the botched criminal investigation into the mysterious killings of
    two other army conscripts has been accompanied by torture and other
    gross violations of due process.

    "Military police officers, military prosecutors and judges carried
    out actions that are punishable by criminal law," she told RFE/RL.

    "We will strive to ensure that they get a fair punishment for what
    they did to these innocent men."

    Razmik Sargsian, Musa Seropian and Arayik Zalian were set free on
    Friday after being unexpectedly acquitted by Armenia's Court of
    Cassation. In a landmark ruling, it overturned life sentences handed
    to them by a lower court and ordered a fresh inquiry into the deaths
    of fellow soldiers Roman Yeghiazarian and Hovsep Mkrtumian.

    All five men served in an army unit stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh's
    northern Mardakert district. The swollen corpses of Yeghiazarian
    and Mkrtumian bearing traces of violence were recovered from a local
    reservoir in January 2004. Several soldiers from their battalion were
    promptly arrested by military prosecutors on suspicion of involvement
    in the crime. One of them effectively testified that the killings
    were committed by Captain Ivan Grigorian, the battalion's Karabakh
    Armenian commander.

    The investigators, however, dismissed the testimony, releasing the
    suspects and arresting Sargsian, Seropian and Zalian instead. They
    claim that the three servicemen brutally murdered their comrades
    following a brawl over a food parcel that was delivered to one of them.

    The accusations are essentially based on Sargsian's videotaped
    "confession" made after fours days of interrogation in April 2004.

    Sargsian has insisted all along that the confession was extracted
    under duress and threats of rape. His face is clearly swollen and
    bruised in video of the interrogation shown by the investigators
    last year. According to Postanjian, the 21-year-old is now in need of
    "serious medical treatment."

    A court in Stepanakert dismissed the allegations of torture, also
    made by Seropian and Zalian, sentencing all three men to 15 years
    in prison in April 2005. Their protestations of innocence were also
    rejected by the Armenian Court of Appeals that extended the jail
    terms to life imprisonment last May. The extraordinary verdict was
    strongly condemned by local and international human rights groups
    before being struck down by the Court of Cassation. It was the first
    known case of an Armenian court defying military prosecutors.

    Armenia's Office of the Prosecutor-General on Monday refused to comment
    on the unprecedented acquittal. "We will not react until we get a full
    copy of the Court of Cassation verdict," a spokeswoman told RFE/RL.

    Deputy Prosecutor-General Jahangirian, who was Armenia's chief military
    and oversaw the troubled inquiry until recently, also declined
    comment. Jahangirian said he continues to believe that the three
    soldiers are guilty moments before they were cleared of the charges.

    Postanjian, who screamed in disbelief as she heard the ruling on
    Friday, admitted that the development took her and the two other
    defense attorneys by surprise. But she said they do not feel that
    their mission has been fulfilled and will demand punishment for those
    who have handled the high-profile case.

    "Yes, the three young men are now free," said Postanjian. "But their
    nearly three-year imprisonment must be compensated not only materially
    but morally so that individuals working as military police officers,
    prosecutors or judges do not commit such illegalities in the future."

    That, according to her, means launching criminal proceedings against
    five military prosecutors and other investigators that arrested
    and interrogated Sargsian, allegedly without a warrant, as well
    as the judges that convicted the three soldiers. Postanjian warned
    that failure to do so would force the defense lawyers to file civil
    lawsuits and take their case to the European Court of Human Rights
    in Strasbourg.

    "If Armenian courts do not compensate Razmik Sargsian, Musa Seropian
    and Arayik Zalian for the material and moral damage inflicted on them
    and if they fail to punish individuals who have committed those crimes,
    then the European Court will certainly address the matter," she said.

    Postanjian and the two other defense counsels, Ashot Atoyan and
    Stepan Voskanian, are themselves facing a criminal investigation for
    allegedly showing contempt for three judges of the Armenian Court
    of Appeals that jailed the conscripts for life. The Office of the
    Prosecutor-General opened a criminal case against the lawyers on
    October 10, the day after the Court of Cassation, Armenia's highest
    body of criminal justice, agreed to consider their appeal against
    the extremely controversial sentences.

    Postanjian rejected the allegations as a "fabrication" aimed
    at discouraging herself and her colleagues from challenging the
    law-enforcement agency. She also repeated their suggestions that the
    killings were the work of Captain Grigorian, the Karabakh Armenian
    officer. "There are numerous clues leading to the commander of the
    battalion," she said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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