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Jailed Ter-Petrosian Allies Charged

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  • Jailed Ter-Petrosian Allies Charged

    JAILED TER-PETROSIAN ALLIES CHARGED
    By Karine Kalantarian and Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Feb 27 2008

    At least three of the allies of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian
    arrested in recent days have been remanded in pre-trial custody on a
    string of criminal charges which the Armenian opposition rejects as
    politically motivated.

    The Armenian police said on Wednesday that the most prominent of them,
    former Deputy Prosecutor-General Gagik Jahangirian, has been formally
    charged with illegal arms possession and assault on "state officials
    performing their duties."

    Jahangirian was arrested along with his brother and two other
    companions on Saturday just hours after being sacked by President
    Robert Kocharian. The sacking came the day after the former chief
    military prosecutor delivered a fiery speech at a Ter-Petrosian rally
    in Yerevan in which he called the official results of the February
    19 presidential election fraudulent and said the ex-president is the
    rightful winner of the vote.

    According to the police, Jahangirian and his brother Vartan resisted
    arrest, compelling law-enforcement officers to use force against
    them. A police statement said one of the officers accidentally fired
    gunshots, lightly wounding Vartan Jahangirian and two of his comrades.

    Jahangirian was visited on Tuesday in custody by Zaruhi Postanjian, a
    well-known lawyer and parliament deputy affiliated with the opposition
    Zharangutyun party. Speaking to RFE/RL, Postanjian condemned the case
    against the controversial former prosecutor as "political persecution."

    Ironically, Postanjian rose to prominence in late 2006 for helping
    to secure the sensational acquittal of three Armenian soldiers
    controversially accused of murdering two fellow conscripts in
    Nagorno-Karabakh at a time when Jahangirian served as chief military
    prosecutor. The young lawyer repeatedly accused investigators overseen
    by Jahangirian of torturing her clients.

    Two other prominent detainees, Smbat Ayvazian and Suren Sureniants,
    are senior members of the radical opposition Hanrapetutyun party.

    Both men were arrested on Sunday near Yerevan's Liberty Square where
    tens of thousands of Ter-Petrosian supporters have been demonstrating
    against the official vote results for over a week. Ayvazian was charged
    late Tuesday with resisting arrest, while Sureniants is prosecuted for
    "organizing" the unsanctioned the rallies.

    Two other jailed activists coordinated the ex-president's election
    campaign in the northwestern Shirak region. Democratic Fatherland
    Party leader Petros Makeyan and Ashot Zakarian, head of the regional
    chapter of the influential Yerkrapah Union of war veterans, stand
    accused of obstructing the work of an election commission in the
    regional capital Gyumri. Both men deny the charges, saying that they
    simply protested against an instance of fraud in the polling station.

    Another prominent oppositionist, Nor Zhamanakner Party leader Aram
    Karapetian, is facing prosecution on charges of "false denunciation."

    Aides say the accusations stem from a speech in which Karapetian
    implicitly blamed President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian for the October 1999 assassinations in Armenia's
    parliament. A court in Yerevan was expected to remand the pro-Russian
    politician in two-month custody later on Wednesday.

    Ter-Petrosian has referred to his detained loyalists as "political
    prisoners," saying that they were arrested as part of a government
    effort to derail his vocal campaign for the scrapping of the official
    vote results and a re-run of the presidential election.

    However, Armenia's pro-government human rights ombudsman, Armen
    Harutiunian, insisted on Wednesday that the cases against the
    oppositionists are not necessarily politically motivated. "Legal
    mechanisms will show whether all of that was justified," he told
    journalists. "I don't think that anyone wants a wave [of appeals] to
    the European Court of Human Rights. True, those individuals are mainly
    from the opposition camp but that doesn't mean those accusations are
    unfounded from the legal standpoint."

    Harutiunian also urged the Armenian authorities and the Ter-Petrosian
    camp to embark on a political dialogue. He praised in that regard
    Sarkisian's stated readiness to form a coalition government with his
    political opponents. "Intolerance and extremism has nothing to do
    with democracy," he said in an apparent jibe at the radical opposition.

    Meanwhile, the arrests of Ter-Petrosian supporters appear to be
    continuing. Lawyers close to the ex-president said law-enforcement
    bodies arrested late Tuesday two residents of the northern
    Noyemberian district. One of them is the older brother of Vano
    Siradeghian, Armenia's fugitive former interior minister close to
    Ter-Petrosian. Officers of the National Security Service (NSS) were
    said to have detained the 73-year-old Seryozha Siradeghian after
    finding an old rifle in his house in the local village of Koti. The
    NSS did not immediately confirm the information.
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