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Nairobi: Is Kuria an undercover lawyer for Armenians?

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  • Nairobi: Is Kuria an undercover lawyer for Armenians?

    Is Kuria an undercover lawyer for Armenians? By Patrick Mathangani and Biketi
    Kikechi

    The Standard, Kenya
    July 12 2006

    Is Senior Counsel Gibson Kamau Kuria representing the Artur brothers
    through the backdoor? That is the question the Kiruki Commission of
    Inquiry had to wrestle with on Wednesday.

    Kuria, who is on record for Narc activist Mary Wambui's daughter,
    Winfred Wangui, was taken to task after he appeared to be defending
    the bogus Armenian brothers, Artur Margaryan and Artur Sargasyan.

    A commissioner, Hassan Isaack, took Kuria to task, telling him that
    as an officer of the High Court appearing for a client, he should
    not be seen as being misused by others not present at the commission.

    Lawyer Gibson Kamau Kuria cross-examines a witness at the Kiruki
    Commission of Inquiry at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre,
    Nairobi, on Wednesday. Pic by Jacob Otieno

    "Do you have instructions from the Artur brothers?" Hassan asked Kuria,
    adding: "If you continue with this line of questioning, it will appear
    that you will be taking over the brief of those who were turned away."

    Last week, lawyer Oscar Avedi appeared before the commission inquiring
    into the activities of the brothers and sought leave to represent them.

    Big cover-up

    But commission chairman Shedrach Kiruki turned him away because it was
    not clear whom he wanted to represent as the real Artur Margaryan and
    Artur Sargasyan lived in the city of Yerevan, Armenia, and the United
    Arab Emirates and had never been to Kenya, according to Interpol.

    However, Kuria said he had no instructions from the Artur brothers
    and assured the commission that he would comply with its directions.

    "But whether it is the Artur brothers or not, I have the duty of
    assisting the commission in finding the truth," said Kuria.

    He accused the assisting counsel of a big cover-up, and urged the
    commission to find out the truth on the Armenian saga either through
    cross-examination of witnesses or through other people.

    Assisting counsel Dorcas Oduor had interjected while Kuria was
    cross-examining a witness, and sought to know who Kuria's client was.

    Just as in the previous day, Kuria put it to the witness that it
    was the Customs officers that had provoked the Armenians. He claimed
    the Arturs had not drawn guns at the airport as alleged by Charles
    Nambale and Nelson Ochieng.

    Derogatory racial slurs

    Kuria also accused Nambale of being on the payroll of politicians.

    Oduor at this point sought to know the limit of Kuria's brief because
    he was putting statements to the witness when it was clear his client
    was not at the scene.

    "If his instructions are different from what we have on record,
    then there must be another witness who is instructing him... but
    for purposes of clarity, it is important for us to know his limit,"
    said Oduor.

    And in another day of high drama, graphic details of the combat
    abilities of the Arturs emerged, with a Customs official re-enacting
    a brutal assault on him by the brothers.

    During the attack, the official was punched and humiliated with
    derogatory racial slurs. It was the first witness account to
    corroborate what has only been widely published in the local media
    about the alleged Armenians, described variously as international
    crooks on the run.

    Racial epithets

    On Wednesday, Nambale - himself a self-defence artist trained in the
    United Kingdom - moved the commission with an account of his moments
    of horror at the hands of Margaryan.

    Still in pain even as he testified, he pleaded for pain killers. The
    commission obliged. He narrated how the brothers hurled racial epithets
    at him, calling him a "stupid African" and a "black African monkey,"
    Nambale said.

    His crime: He refused to clear the guests Margaryan had come to
    receive at the airport after they declined to pay duty.

    The guests claimed the goods they had brought in, including seven
    CCTV cameras and a receiver, were worth Sh40,000 but he judged they
    were much more expensive and attracted more duty.

    When he refused to clear them, a protocol officer from the Ministry
    of Foreign Affairs asked him to "talk to Winnie" but he declined
    because he could only take orders from his own boss.
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