Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Oppositionist Implicates Sarkisian In Editor's Beating

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Oppositionist Implicates Sarkisian In Editor's Beating

    OPPOSITIONIST IMPLICATES SARKISIAN IN EDITOR'S BEATING
    By Hovannes Shoghikian and Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 11 2006

    The leader of an opposition party that controls a leading Armenian
    newspaper said at the weekend that he suspects Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian of being behind last week's reported beating of its
    editor-in-chief.

    Hovannes Galajian of the "Iravunk" bi-weekly and his staff believe the
    incident was the result of their hard-hitting coverage of Armenia's
    leaders and their loyalists. They have implicitly described Sarkisian
    as one of its possible organizers, pointing to a recent "Iravunk"
    article that attacked and derided the powerful minister.

    Sarkisian dismissed such suggestions on Thursday, saying that Galajian
    is too insignificant a person to incur his ire. "I don't fight against
    or punish wretched people. I just ignore them," he said.

    According to Hrant Khachatrian of the Union for Constitutional
    Rights (SIM) party, which founded "Iravunk" more than 15 years ago,
    the remarks only reinforced his suspicion that Sarkisian may have
    ordered the violence. "We had a number of equally valid theories
    relating to Hovannes Galajian's discourse against both economic and
    political criminal elements," Khachatrian told journalists. "But
    after Serzh Sarkisian's reaction I began to have more suspicions
    [about his involvement.]"

    Galajian claims to have been beaten up by two unknown men outside
    his Yerevan home on Wednesday. He says the attackers resembled the
    notoriously violent bodyguards of wealthy businessmen close to the
    government. They are usually beefy and have very short haircuts.

    The reported attack, which is being investigated by the police, has
    been widely condemned by Armenian human rights groups, journalist
    associations and opposition parties. The country's human rights
    ombudsman, Armen Harutiunian, has also joined in the chorus of
    condemnations, saying that the law-enforcement authorities are not
    doing enough to prevent periodical violence against local journalists.

    Sarkisian's contemptuous description of the "Iravunk" editor prompted
    on Saturday a scathing commentary by "Haykakan Zhamanak," another
    paper highly critical of the government. In a front-page editorial, the
    popular daily said Armenia's second most powerful man should look for
    "wretched people" in his entourage, rather than the media. "As for us
    [journalists,] the only argument in support of our wretchedness is
    that we tolerate [Sarkisian] and the likes of him at the helm of our
    state," it snapped.
Working...
X