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Newspaper Staff Protest Editor's Arrest

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  • Newspaper Staff Protest Editor's Arrest

    NEWSPAPER STAFF PROTEST EDITOR'S ARREST
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 27 2006

    Journalists working for an independent Armenian newspaper picketed
    the Prosecutor-General's Office on Tuesday to condemn the arrest of
    their young editor-in-chief accused of draft evasion.

    Arman Babajanian of the "Zhamanak Yerevan" newspaper was detained in
    his office and questioned by prosecutors for several hours on Monday.

    A statement released by the law-enforcement agency said he confessed
    "in the presence of his defense attorney" to forging personal documents
    to dodge compulsory military service in 2002. No further details of
    the criminal case have been made public so far.

    The allegations were rejected as unfounded and politically motivated by
    "Zhamanak Yerevan" staff that staged a protest outside the prosecutors'
    headquarters in downtown Yerevan along with a small group of other
    reporters, human rights campaigners and opposition activists. They
    chanted "Shame! Shame!" and carried posters that referred to the
    30-year-old editor as a "political prisoner."

    "We don't believe that he made a confession in the presence of his
    lawyer because he did not have one," said Manuk Sukiasian, the paper's
    executive director. "He hired a lawyer only today."

    Babajanian's deputy Liza Chagharian and other colleagues claimed
    that he is being prosecuted for publishing articles critical of
    President Robert Kocharian, Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian and
    other senior officials. "I insist that his arrest is connected with
    his journalistic activities," she said.

    The National Press Club, which mainly unites journalists critical
    of the Armenian government, echoed these claims, saying that the
    authorities are trying to bully the independent media ahead of
    next year's parliamentary elections. "The NPC demands that the
    law-enforcement bodies stick to the letter and spirit of law and do
    not become a tool in the regime's hands," it said in a statement.

    Two other, more moderate media associations also expressed concern at
    Babajanian's arrest. In a joint open letter, the Yerevan Press Club
    and the Committee to Support Freedom of Speech urged the Armenian
    prosecutor-general to name the lawyer who witnessed the editor's
    alleged confession.

    Babajanian was not formally charged with draft evasion as of Tuesday
    evening. Under Armenian law, the prosecutors have to press the charges
    or set him free by Thursday morning.

    They rejected on Tuesday the protesters' demands to release Babajanian
    pending investigation. A spokeswoman for the Prosecutor-General's
    Office, Sona Truzian, argued that indicted draft dodgers are normally
    kept in pre-trial custody in Armenia. "In this sense, Arman Babajanian
    is not an exception to the rule," she told RFE/RL.

    "Zhamanak Yerevan" was set up last year and currently sells several
    thousand copies in Yerevan and California, which is home to a large
    Armenian community. Its news reporting has generally been critical
    of the Armenian authorities.
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