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Heritage Gate?: Political Party Demands President Be Questioned

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  • Heritage Gate?: Political Party Demands President Be Questioned

    ArmeniaNow.com-September 8, 2006

    HERITAGE GATE?: POLITICAL PARTY DEMANDS PRESIDENT BE QUESTIONED

    Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    The Heritage political party held a press conference this week in which
    it demanded that the Prosecutor General of Armenia question President
    Robert Kocharyan, concerning allegations of a "mini-Watergate".

    Party founder and former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Raffi
    Hovannisian, made reference to the famous US scandal that ended the
    presidency of Richard Nixon. He equated it to actions taken against
    the Heritage party. The party alleges that information has been stolen,
    and that the President's office knew about it.

    The background:

    On March 4, Heritage party's offices were shut down by the government,
    which claimed the party no longer had a right to operate from space
    provided at the Paronian Theater.

    The party offices were sealed until May 29, while the party filed
    action that eventually led to getting the offices back.

    Upon regaining its facilities, Heritage staff learned that one of its
    computers had been tampered with, during the period that the office
    was supposed to have remained sealed. It filed a complaint with the
    Kentron Division of Yerevan Police, demanding an investigation.

    On August 30, the police returned a decision saying there was no
    grounds for an investigation.

    A lawyer for the party, Zaruhi Postanjyan, however, says experts at the
    National Bureau of Examination at the National Academy of Sciences,
    has shown the computer had been switched on for 22-24 minutes during
    the night of March 8. The examination also found that a different
    monitor and a memory device had been connected during that time.

    "This is a mini-Watergate scandal being repeated in Armenia," said
    the party's fiery founder. "In a country with a declared rule of law
    they close one's office in the night without any court decision, they
    penetrate into the office in the night four days after the closing,
    switch on the computer there and get the secret information about
    the party and its activists."

    Hovannisian, among the strongest and most persistent of Kocharyan
    adversaries, says the Office of the President is aware of the spying
    on his party and that theft has been committed.

    Attorney Postanjyan alleges that the police were negligent.

    "The results of the examination are enough to bring a case into
    action," she says. "However, ignoring the law and justice, law
    enforcers refuse to hold a relevant investigation referring instead
    to the lack of the corpus delicti," says Postanjyan.

    Hovannisian believes that, in addition to other documents, a list
    of party activists was stolen, with the intention to intimidate
    sympathizers.

    "I hope the national Security Service has no connection to all of this,
    because the information was so badly stolen, that I wouldn't like
    to learn the Service operates so poorly," Hovannisian sarcastically
    stated. "I am confident the incident was a response to our recent
    civil activity taking place in an atmosphere of fear."

    The leader of the party complained that appeals by the party have
    been denied at every level of the justice system.

    During the press conference, he also commented on Wednesday's murder
    of the head of Armenia's "tax police".

    "It reflects the illness of our authorities, our state and our
    society," Hovannisian said. "We can keep speaking about law and
    democracy, but unless everyone - whether a President or an ordinary
    citizen - is equal before the law in this country, this kind of things
    will continue to happen."
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