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Bone Fractures In March 1-2 Video Not Parts of Human Body - Min.

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  • Bone Fractures In March 1-2 Video Not Parts of Human Body - Min.

    BONE FRACTURES IN VIDEO FILM ON MARCH 1-2 EVENTS ARE NOT PARTS OF
    HUMAN BODY, DIRECTOR OF FORENSIC EXAMINATION CENTER OF HEALTH MINISTRY
    CLAIMS

    http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117744

    YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 26, NOYAN TAPAN. At the September 26 sitting, the
    National Assembly Ad Hoc Committee on Inquiry into the March 1-2 Events
    in Yerevan and Their Causes discussed issues related to some scenes of
    the video film on the indicated events, which was spread by the
    opposition. It was mentioned that after watching the video, the
    committee sent it to the RA Prosecutor General's Office for an expert
    conclusion, as well as applied to the respective bodies with some
    questions. With the aim of receiving explanations to these questions,
    the head of the investigation group on the indicated case Vahagn
    Harutyunian, investigator Vaghinak Mkrtchian, and the director of the
    Forensic Scientific Practial Center of the RA Ministry of Health Shota
    Vardanian were invited to the sitting.

    Tigran Karakhanian, Garik Hovakimian and Roman Grigorian - the three
    young men sitting at the wall of the French embassy in Yerevan, as
    shown in the video film - were also invited to attend the sitting.

    "The committee wants to state once again that it has no intention to
    conceal anything from anybody, it will try to answer all the questions
    raised, and, naturally, the commission will give answers through the
    investigation body, experts and witnesses," the head of the committee,
    secretary of the NA "Republican Party of Armenia" (RPA) faction Samvel
    Nikoyan said.

    The first question was about the video's scenes, in one of which there
    are dark stains on the wall of the French embassy, while in another
    scene these stains are absent, which, according to S. Nikoyan, some
    people believe are blood stains that were later removed. This version
    was flatly denied by the head of the investigation group and the young
    men who did not rule out that the stains might be left by a "Molotov
    cocktail" hitting the wall. V. Harutyunian said that although an expert
    conclusion has not been prepared yet, he can declare on behalf of the
    investigation group that the marks on the wall are not blood stains. It
    was mentioned that the wall is made of basalt so it would be difficult
    to remove stains, especially blood, from that wall. In his words, the
    embassy employees who were questioned also said that the wall had not
    been cleaned. According to the young men - witnesses, they were
    detained by police on suspicion of having stolen goods from shops, then
    kept for some time at the wall of the embassy and later taken to a
    police station where they were questioned and set free, and throughout
    that time no violence was committed by law enforcers against them or
    anybody else.

    As regards the accident when a UAZ car ran down a citizen, the head of
    the investigation group said that the man who was run down was Gevorg
    Tevanian, 27, of the village of Marmarashen (Ararat marz), who was
    questioned as a witness, later a victim in the case under
    investigation. The identity of the person who ran down G. Tevanian has
    not been established yet because, according to eyewitnesses, before the
    accident the car (a vehicle of police troops) was seized from its
    driver by a 30-year-olf man who later took to flight.

    The video film's next scene, on which the committee focused, was the
    one showing a jaw and other parts of a body lying in the street. S.
    Vardanian gave explanations in this connection, sating that a copy of
    the conclusion will be submitted to the committee within a week. It was
    indicated, however, that the appropriate experts examined the video
    film and "it was definitely substantiated that the bone fractures in
    the video are not parts of a human body but parts of a piglet, a
    piglet's cheek-bone, and a tongue of a sheep or calf." As for the large
    amount of blood and the thick layer of it in the scene, it was
    explained that those who filmed "used a combination of shade and some
    liquid which was quite a clever editing."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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