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  • Dark Secrets of Armenian Brothers Begin to Emerge

    Dark Secrets of Armenian Brothers Begin to Emerge
    http://allafrica.com/stories/200606280979.h tml

    The East African Standard (Nairobi)
    NEWS
    June 29, 2006
    Posted to the web June 28, 2006

    By Biketi Kikechi
    Nairobi

    Details of the dark secrets of the Armenian brothers - which the
    Government kept from Kenyans - started to emerge as the Kiruki
    Commission began its sittings in Nairobi.

    It emerged that since March 18, the Government knew that the Artur
    brothers could be international crooks on the run with forged Armenian
    passports. Even more shocking, the police knew that the man presenting
    himself as Artur Margaryan could be a dangerous criminal using a
    passport reportedly stolen in Armenia, making his real identity a mystery.

    These damning revelations are in a report relayed to Nairobi by
    Interpol. However, Kenyan police failed to act on the March 18 alert.
    The details came out on Wednesday when Immigration minister Gideon
    Konchella took to the stand at the Commission of Inquiry appointed by
    President Kibaki to investigate the activities of Margaryan and Artur
    Sargasyan.

    They point to the fact that the Government knew all along that the
    Armenians were questionable characters, even as its own officials put
    out statements variously defending the duo as investors, consultants and
    law-abiding citizens. The Government, heavily criticised for bungling
    the affair, instantly found itself on the receiving end only moments
    after the proceedings started.

    International criminals

    Konchella, who has displayed remarkable inconsistency every time he has
    spoken on the Armenian saga, slipped deeper into the vortex of
    contradiction when he admitted the duo were criminals.

    "All I can say is that these were dubious international criminals," he
    told the inquiry sitting at the Kenyatta International Conference
    Centre, Nairobi. The minister said Kenyan passports recovered from the
    Arturs' house in Runda were stolen from the Immigration offices at Nyayo
    House.

    Assisting Counsel Dorcas Oduor gave Konchellah evidence to show that the
    Kenya Revenue Authority also allocated them Personal Identification
    Numbers for civil servants.

    Interpol wrote another letter to their Kenyan counterparts dated April
    3, which read in part: "Please be informed that we have all the grounds
    to think that the person who presented himself as Margaryan Artur in
    your country is, in fact, another person who uses the passport of Artur
    Margaryan which got lost in 2002".

    The Kenyan passports were registered in the names of Sargasyan Arman
    number A1031195 and Sargasyan Arturk A 1031196, with both Armenians
    describing themselves as Kenyans.

    During Wednesday's hearing, Konchella admitted that the two brothers
    were deported to Dubai instead of their country of origin.

    Contents from the Interpol letters showed that the Armenian authorities
    were particularly keen to know whether any criminal proceedings had been
    preferred against the brothers. At one point, Interpol expressed
    surprise that no action had been taken against the duo.

    Interpol report

    The letter from Interpol Yerevan read in part: "It is therefore
    surprising that no action was taken against the alleged crook since
    March when Kenyan police were furnished with photographs of the real
    Artur Margaryan".

    Former Police Commissioner Shedrach Kiruki chairs the three-man
    commission. The other members are Bishop Horace Etemesi and lawyer Ahmed
    Hassan Issak.

    Taking Konchella through the evidence-in-chief, Oduor sought to know the
    requirements for entry and exit in Kenya, visa application, passports,
    work permits, citizenship and deportation. Konchella said he first
    learned about the Armenian saga on March 14, while working in western Kenya.

    "The journalists asked me who they were and my response was that they
    could have been Czechs or from some eastern European country but I
    clarified five days later when my officers told me they were actually
    Armenians," said Konchella.

    He said that according to records at the Immigration Department, the two
    were consultants in marketing, business development and finance.
    Konchella was given the Interpol report, which contained details that
    the real Artur Margaryan was born on January 15, 1973, in Yerevan city,
    Armenia. He is holder of Armenian passport number 0631173 issued on
    October 11, 2002, given to him after he lost his first passport number
    0322223 issued in Sokhi City, Russian Federation.

    Deportation order

    Interpol said Artur had never been to Africa or Kenya and was at the
    time, March 18, living in Armenia.

    Armenian police said Artur Sargasyan also lived in Yerevan before
    relocating to the United Arab Emirates with his family.

    They had no relationship with the Armenian prime minister, a claim made
    by their alleged namesake in Kenya. They provided Kenyan police with
    pictures of the real Margaryan and Sargasyan for comparison with the
    persons who were introducing themselves by those names.

    "Inform us whether a criminal case is instituted against the persons in
    subject, the accusations and details of the case," demanded the Interpol
    office in Armenia.

    They expressed concern because the mass media in their country was
    already in possession of stories about the alleged mercenaries from
    their country. Konchella said Immigration officers issued passports and
    other documents like work permits.

    He said he did not know much about the Armenians until he signed their
    deportation order on June 9, 2006.

    "I dealt with their case again on June 9, 2006, when the Principal
    Immigration Officer called to tell me that the Commissioner of Police
    had demanded the deportation of four people.

    Konchella said he complied and signed the order on the same day because
    the law allows him to deport anyone considered undesirable.

    Oduor then demanded to know why his deportation order said they were
    Armenians yet they were deported to Dubai.

    Excerpts of the proceedings:

    Oduor: Look at your order, it says they were Armenians and yet they were
    deported to Dubai, do you see that?

    Konchella: I authorised that according to Section 8 (1) F and I also
    later learned from the Principal Immigration Officer that they had
    requested to be deported to Dubai.

    Oduor: Did you confirm that they came from Dubai?

    Konchella: Yes, we learned from reliable information that they actually
    lived there.

    Oduor: What about Alexander Pack and Dimitri Tasch?

    Konchella: Alexander was to be deported to Russia while Dimitri was to
    be deported to Moldovia.

    Oduor: Our information is that they were also deported to Dubai, is that
    right?

    Konchella: I was told that they all requested to be transferred to Dubai.

    Oduor: Is it also true that Margaryan left on a different passport and
    not the one he used when coming to the country?

    Kiruki: Can the minister answer that?

    Oduor: I just want him to tell the commission if he was aware but if
    not, he is free to say so.

    Kiruki: The minister may not know that.

    Oduor: Yes, that is true, but I just want to hear if he knew.

    Konchella: Yes, I'm aware that one had a passport and the other didn't have.

    Oduor: What about their Tanzanian bodyguards?

    Konchella: I heard they were taken to the border and handed over to
    Tanzanian police.

    Oduor: Did you sign their deportation order?

    Konchella: I did not sign and they were not deported. They were just
    escorted to the border by police and sent away.

    Oduor: What about the two Kenyan passports recovered from their house in
    Runda?

    Konchella: Yes, I heard that the passports were recovered from their
    house in Runda.

    Oduor: Look at the first passport, the names are Arman Sargasyan number
    A1031195, did you see it?

    Konchella: No, this is the first time I'm seeing that but they are
    genuine Kenyans passports. I did not sign them. These were forged documents.

    Oduor: Let us look at the second passport and the name there is Arturk
    Sargasyan number A1031196 and again he describes himself as a Kenyan and
    his place of birth as Russia.

    Konchella: They are genuine Kenyan passports, but what I can say is that
    three passports got lost from the Immigration Department. We reported
    the matter to all border points, and circulated information to our
    foreign missions and other agencies on May 2. One of those passports is
    still missing.
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