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Oppositionist Freed Pending Trial

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  • Oppositionist Freed Pending Trial

    OPPOSITIONIST FREED PENDING TRIAL
    Ruben Meloyan

    Armenialiberty.org
    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/1794174.h tml
    Aug 6 2009

    An Armenian opposition activist was released from pre-trial detention
    late on Wednesday one week after surrendering to the police to face
    trial on charges stemming from last year's post-election unrest
    in Yerevan.

    Hamlet Hovannisian was among prominent supporters of opposition leader
    Levon Ter-Petrosian who went into hiding following the March 1, 2008
    clashes between security forces and opposition protesters. Like other,
    arrested oppositionists, they were charged with organizing what the
    Armenian call "mass disturbances."

    Hovannisian, who coordinated Ter-Petrosian's 2008 election campaign
    in the northern Lori region, turned himself in on July 30 one day
    before the official deadline set for fugitive oppositionists willing
    to be granted amnesty. Under a government-drafted amnesty bill passed
    by parliament on June 19, they will be set free if found guilty and
    sentenced to up to five years in prison.

    A Yerevan court agreed to order Hovannisian's release jail pending
    trial after his face-to-face interrogations with a man whose
    pre-trial testimony formed the basis of the criminal case against the
    oppositionist. The man, Vrezh Nikolian, was sentenced to six and a
    half years in prison last year for manufacturing metal objects that
    were allegedly meant to be used by opposition protesters against riot
    police. He claimed in his pre-trial testimony that he was commissioned
    to do that by Hovannisian.

    Both Hovannisian and his defense lawyer, Hovik Arsenian, said
    on Thursday that Nikolian retracted that claim during the joint
    interrogation. "The main accusation has not been proven," Hovannisian
    told RFE/RL. "I think that's what made them free me for now."

    There are no indications yet that Armenia's Special Investigative
    Service (SIS), which has been leading the criminal investigation into
    the 2008 unrest, intends to drop the case against the retired army
    colonel. The SIS has also pressed similar charges leveled against
    two other oppositionists that came out of hiding earlier in July.
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