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Kenya deports Armenian "mercenaries"

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  • Kenya deports Armenian "mercenaries"

    Reuters, UK
    June 10 2006

    Kenya deports Armenian "mercenaries"
    Sat Jun 10, 2006 11:04 AM GMT

    By C. Bryson Hull

    NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya deported two Armenian brothers on Friday
    whose swaggering lifestyle turned them into celebrities after they
    were accused of being mercenaries involved in a controversial police
    raid on media offices.

    There have been repeated allegations that the wealthy Armenians,
    known for their fleet of luxury cars and flashy jewellery, were
    protected by powerful political allies in Kenya.

    Police earlier arrested the brothers and seized a Mercedes car with
    government plates during a raid on the heavily guarded home of Artur
    Margariyan and Arthur Sargsian (Eds: correct) in an elegant Nairobi
    suburb. Two lesser known brothers, Arman Damidri and Alexander
    Tashchi, were also arrested.

    Police sources said they made the arrests after the brothers roughed
    up customs officials at Nairobi airport.

    "They were supposed to pay for some items they were carrying and they
    got into a scuffle before leaving. They were followed home," said a
    police official who asked not to be named.

    The government later declared all four persona non grata, and said
    they were being deported following a "serious breach of airport
    security".

    LUXURY CARS

    The private Citizen television station earlier showed police seizing
    a dozen car license plates, including some supposed to be issued only
    to diplomats, during the raid. Among more than 10 luxury cars at
    their home, a Lexus truck could also be seen with red and blue police
    lights in the grille.

    The police official said guns, machetes and bulletproof vests were
    recovered.

    The brothers burst onto Kenyan front pages in March after opposition
    politician Raila Odinga accused them of being mercenaries behind a
    raid on a major Kenyan media house that drew a storm of domestic and
    international criticism.

    The brothers denied Odinga's charges.

    The raid by police commandos on KTN television and its sister
    newspaper the Standard was seen as a low point in the three-year rule
    of President Mwai Kibaki, already suffering from a sharp fall in
    popularity and major corruption scandals.

    The Kenyan government justified the raid by saying journalists had
    been bribed to plant stories that threatened national security, but
    never clarified what the stories were.

    The government promised an investigation into the Armenians, but has
    never made results public.

    The brothers have told Reuters they are businessmen based in Dubai
    with interests in import-export, property development, a nightclub
    and gold and diamond trading.

    They have become fixtures in cartoons and gossip columns despite
    their repeated assertions that they are respectable businessmen
    prepared to invest large sums in Kenya.
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