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Nairobi: Brothers' stay in Kenya shrouded in secrecy

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  • Nairobi: Brothers' stay in Kenya shrouded in secrecy

    The Standard (Nairobi) Kenya
    June 10, 2006


    Brothers' stay in Kenya shrouded in secrecy


    By Ben Agina

    The Armenian brothers at the centre of mercenary allegations have
    been in the news since March.


    A sample of one of the vehicles the brothers own

    After endless speculations about their mysterious presence in the
    country, the two foreigners were yesterday bound to exit as
    dramatically as they entered, after it emerged that they were to be
    deported.

    The two came into the limelight after Lang'ata MP Raila Odinga
    claimed that there were mercenaries in the country, shortly after the
    police raid on the Standard Media Group premises on March 2.

    Raila later named a physical address in Nairobi's upmarket Runda
    area, claiming that that was where the mercenaries lived with the
    support of the Government.

    But Artur Margaryan and Artur Sargysan later held a conference at the
    Jomo Kenyatta International Airport VIP lounge, where they denied
    that they were mercenaries.

    They further made a sensational claim that that they had loaned Raila
    Sh100m and also met Mwingi North MP Kalonzo Musyoka.

    The most sensational revelation was that the brothers jointly owned a
    company with the daughter of Narc activist, Mary Wambui.

    The Standard exclusively reported that Ms Winfred Wangui was one of
    the five shareholders of Kensington Holding Limited, alongside
    Margaryan and Sargysan.

    The company records indicated that the other shareholders were Alois
    Otieno Omitta, believed to be Wambui's personal assistant, and a Mr
    Julius Maina Mwangi. At one time, Artur Margaryan refused to allow
    police into his rented house and rebuffed their attempts to persuade
    him to record a statement.


    Margaryan and one of his nine dogs that he imported from Dubai

    He told the eight police officers that they should either arrest him
    or produce a search warrant before he could comply.

    The police left the house after they received a telephone call from a
    senior officer, ordering them to return to their base, raising
    further questions, as to who was "protecting" the aliens.

    The police had wanted Margaryan to accompany them so that Nairobi
    Deputy provincial CID chief, Isaiah Osugo, who had been appointed by
    Police Commissioner, Major-General Hussein Ali, to investigate the
    mercenary claim, could interrogate him.

    The Orange Democratic Movement accused the Government of providing
    security to the Armenians, whom they alleged were international
    criminals. There was outrage when it emerged that the Armenians had
    been chauffeured to JKIA in two Government vehicles guarded by two
    outriders to conduct a "stage-managed" press conference.

    They were sneaked in through Gate 1 and later disguised to appear as
    if they had just landed at the airport before addressing journalists.

    The brothers, at one point claimed, that they would launch an
    ambitious slum-grading project in the city.

    During another dramatic moment, police saved Artur Margaryan from a
    lynch mob in the streets of Nairobi.

    He had just left the Standard/KTN offices at I&M Tower Building, on
    Kenyattaa Avenue, after addressing a press conference, denying once
    again that he was a mercenary.

    But as he waited for a chauffeured car to pick him up, an angry crowd
    confronted him and began chanting: "Mercenary! Mercenary! Mwizi!
    Mwizi! (Thief! Thief)", forcing him to jump over guard rails along
    Kenyatta Avenue to escape.
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