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Armenian Ex-Foreign Minister Faces Trial Over Unrest

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  • Armenian Ex-Foreign Minister Faces Trial Over Unrest

    ARMENIAN EX-FOREIGN MINISTER FACES TRIAL OVER UNREST
    Mariam Harutunian

    Agence France Presse
    December 17, 2008 Wednesday

    Seven top opposition supporters, including an Armenian ex-foreign
    minister, will go on trial on Friday on charges of seeking to overthrow
    the government in unrest this year that left 10 dead.

    Prosecutors allege that former foreign minister Alexander Arzumanian,
    three members of parliament and two other government critics were
    seeking to "usurp state power" when they organised mass protests
    in February.

    Thousands of supporters of former Armenian president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian rallied for 11 days to denounce President Serzh
    Sarkisian's victory in elections, before street battles broke out
    with riot police.

    Two police officers and eight civilians were killed in the clashes
    and dozens more were injured, many from gunshot wounds. Ter-Petrossian
    had finished second in the vote.

    Critics allege that the prosecution is politically motivated and aimed
    at stamping out opposition to Sarkisian in the ex-Soviet republic.

    "Justice is not being served, we don't have an independent
    judiciary. This is a show trial," said Arzumanian's American wife
    Melissa Brown, who met the former diplomat while he was an ambassador
    in Washington.

    Arzumanian, Armenia's foreign minister from 1996 to 1998, was
    Ter-Petrosian's election campaign manager.

    The chief investigator in the case, Vahan Harutunian, said the evidence
    against the accused was extensive and that prosecutors had interviewed
    more than 500 witnesses.

    "There is ample evidence to support the case, otherwise it would not
    have been sent to court," he said.

    "Even if they are politicians, they committed a crime, there is
    evidence of that and they are legally responsible. Everyone is equal
    before the law."

    But lawyer Hovik Arsenian, who represents Arzumanian and two other
    defendants, said the evidence against his clients was weak and that
    he had no hope of getting an objective hearing.

    "This is an imitation of a court case," he said.

    "All of the so-called evidence in this case in fact proves the opposite
    -- the innocence of my clients.... It is obvious that this case has
    nothing to do with criminal justice."

    The trial will be closely watched abroad as a sign of whether Armenia
    is meeting its democratic commitments.

    During a visit to Yerevan last month, the Council of Europe's
    Commissioner for Human Rights Thomas Hammarberg raised concerns about
    "seemingly artificial or politically motivated charges" against
    opposition supporters, Armenian news agencies reported.

    The Strasbourg-based Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    is due in January to discuss suspending the voting rights of its
    Armenian members because of concerns over democracy in the country.

    The defendants each face up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

    More than 140 people were arrested following the violence and 52 have
    already been tried and received prison sentences of varying lengths.

    Armenia -- a mountainous country of about three million people
    wedged between Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran and Turkey -- has seen
    repeated political violence and post-election protests since gaining
    independence with the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991.
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