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Senior Tax Official Killed In Car Blast

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  • Senior Tax Official Killed In Car Blast

    SENIOR TAX OFFICIAL KILLED IN CAR BLAST
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 6 2006

    The Armenian government's top official in charge of detecting and
    investigating tax evasion was killed in a car explosion in downtown
    Yerevan early on Wednesday.

    Shahen Hovasapian, head of a State Taxation Service (STS) division
    tasked with combating tax fraud, was found in a critical condition
    in his government-owned car after it was rocked by the blast just
    50 meters from his apartment building. He died while being rushed to
    hospital, police and other security officials at the scene told RFE/RL.

    They said that an explosive device planted under a front seat occupied
    by Hovasapian went off just seconds after he and his teenage son
    were driven away from their home. They said the driver suffered
    minor injuries, while the young man survived unscathed. The blast
    left a gaping hole under the car's front seat next to the driver's,
    suggesting that Hovasapian was its main target.

    President Robert Kocharian was quick to condemn the killing and link it
    with Hovasapian's professional activities. "The criminal conduct, which
    is directed against the state's efforts to toughen tax administration
    and create equal taxation conditions for everyone, is extremely
    condemnable and can not change the resolute state policy pursued in
    that area," his spokesman, Victor Soghomonian, said in a statement.

    Soghomonian also said that Kocharian issued the law-enforcement
    authorities with "strict instructions to take all measures to solve
    the crime as rapidly as possible."

    State prosecutors immediately launched a criminal investigation into
    the apparent assassination but reported no arrests in the following
    hours. Law-enforcement officials refused to come up with possible
    theories of the crime.

    Despite holding an important government post, Hovasapian has rarely
    figured in the news and is not known to have initiated high-profile
    tax evasion cases against big companies controlled by influential
    individuals. The assassinated official himself was a wealthy
    businessman, reportedly owning one of Armenia's two main liquefied
    gas companies, Goshgaz. The other company involved in the lucrative
    gas business, Multi-Leon, is controlled by Gagik Tsarukian, a powerful
    government-connected tycoon.

    Hovasapian, who is a native of Nagorno-Karabakh and was a field
    commander during the war with Azerbaijan, is the first high-ranking
    Armenian tax official killed while in office. Gagik Poghosian, who
    briefly headed the government's tax collection agency in 2000, died
    in a grenade attack under similarly mysterious circumstances five
    years ago. The apparent contract killing has still not been solved.

    Hovasapian's violent death continued recent months' series of
    high-profile murders that have raised widespread concern about the
    situation with crime and rule of law in Armenia. Among their victims
    were a businessman, a reputed crime figure and a senior member of the
    influential Yerkrapah Union of Karabakh war veterans. Nobody has been
    prosecuted in connection with those crimes so far.
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