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Kenya: Confusion As Police Confront Armenian

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  • Kenya: Confusion As Police Confront Armenian

    CONFUSION AS POLICE CONFRONT ARMENIAN

    Daily Nation , Kenya
    March 15 2006

    One of the Armenian brothers at the centre of claims and counter
    claims by the Government and Orange politicians yesterday refused
    to allow police into his rented home and rebuffed their attempts to
    persuade him to record a statement.

    Mr Artur Margaryan addresses the press outside his house in Nairobi's
    Runda estate yesterday where he lives. Photo by Fredrick Omondi Mr
    Artur Margaryan told the squad of eight police officers who went
    to his home in Runda, an upmarket Nairobi estate, that they should
    either arrest him or produce a search warrant before he could cooperate
    with them.

    The police, headed by Runda police station boss Jeremiah Langat,
    left the house after receiving a telephone call from a senior officer
    ordering them to return to their base.

    The eight had gone to House 977 on Glory Road, off Runda Grove, as
    an advance team to provide security for detectives investigating the
    activities of Mr Margaryan and his brother, Mr Artur Sargsyan.

    Mr Margaryan was to have been interviewed by Nairobi deputy
    provincial CID chief Isaiah Osugo, who was appointed last week by
    police commissioner Mohamed Hussein Ali to investigate claims by
    Lang'ata MP Raila Odinga that the brothers were mercenaries.

    Mr Osugo did not go to the house after his advance team was denied
    entry.

    However, Mr Margaryan later emerged from the compound and chatted with
    journalists as Mr Langat, his deputy and three armed police officers
    in uniform returned to the house. When Mr Margaryan saw the officers,
    he cut short his impromptu Press conference and called someone on
    the mobile phone who rushed to open the compound gate.

    During his brief talk to the journalists outside his gate, Mr Margaryan
    confirmed the police had gone to his house in the morning and that
    he would neither leave nor allow the police into the house unless
    they had either an arrest warrant for him or a search warrant.

    Mr Margaryan repeated his claims that he had in the past met Mr
    Odinga. He said it was between December 13 and 15, last year in Dubai,
    when he allegedly gave him the equivalent of Sh100,000 in UAE currency
    (dirham), to spend as he wished.

    He said his brother would be returning to Kenya next week.

    He went on: "I will go to court as well as demand protection from
    the Government because it was my right to ask for protection."

    Mr Margaryan acknowledged that his company Brotherlink International
    Ltd had entered into a contract in January this year to rent the
    house. His company was involved in various businesses including car
    imports, electronics and real estate.

    He further denied having ever visited State House or having met any
    senior police officers.

    Meanwhile, State House last night warned Mr Odinga against dragging
    the presidency into the mercenary claims.

    It said in a statement that allegations that the two men alleged
    to be mercenaries had visited State House on two occasions in the
    recent past were part of a "propaganda war" by Mr Odinga and other
    politicians in the ODM .

    Asked who allowed him and his brother to hold a Press conference at the
    VIP lounge at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, Mr Margaryan
    claimed it was the journalists themselves who had diverted them to
    the lounge as they were walking to the first class lounge.

    But when journalists, some of whom were at the Press conference
    protested they did not have such powers, he contradicted himself,
    saying it was his lawyers Mr Antony Macharia and Mr Fred Ngatia who
    had arranged the Press conference.

    Mr Macharia, who had arrived earlier, declined to comment. He
    also refused to say where or when a Press conference promised by
    Mr Margaryan would take place saying he could do that only after
    receiving instructions from him.

    Asked to explain why his brother's particulars were missing from the
    passenger manifest on the flight he claimed he had taken from Dubai to
    Kenya, he said all passengers from Arab countries used their mothers'
    names and not their own or their fathers'.

    He promised to avail the manifest during the forthcoming Press
    conference.

    After his brief chat with the journalists, Mr Margaryan returned to
    his compound and later drove off in a dark blue Subaru whose number
    plates were hidden behind strips of cardboard. He was accompanied by
    a woman who on Monday he claimed was his bodyguard.
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