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Opposition Tycoon To Stay In Hiding

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  • Opposition Tycoon To Stay In Hiding

    OPPOSITION TYCOON TO STAY IN HIDING

    Armenialiberty.org
    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/1788275.h tml
    July 29 2009

    Armenia -- Khachatur Sukiasian, a fugitive opposition MP and
    businessman.

    Khachatur Sukiasian, a fugitive businessman and opposition
    parliamentarian, said through his lawyers on Wednesday that he will
    not after all surrender to Armenian law-enforcement authorities
    despite the possibility of being granted amnesty.

    Sukiasian was among several opposition figures who went into hiding
    in March 2008 to avoid prosecution for their role in post-election
    demonstrations in Yerevan that were suppressed by the authorities. Like
    three other members of Armenia's parliament arrested in the government
    crackdown, he was charged with plotting to "usurp the state authority"
    and organizing "mass riots" that left ten people dead. State
    prosecutors dropped the coup charges against them in April this year.

    An amnesty bill approved by the National Assembly on June 19 gave
    Sukiasian and other fugitive oppositionists until July 31 to turn
    themselves in and face trial. They will be set free if found guilty
    and sentenced to up to five years in prison. Two of the fugitives
    have already surrendered to the police.

    In a July 6 statement, Sukiasian indicated that he could emerge from
    hiding and hope to avoid imprisonment. Law-enforcement officials made
    clear, however, that he would be kept in detention at least until
    the end of his trial.

    The tycoon's lawyers said on Wednesday that he is "not preparing"
    to go on trial and risk imprisonment. "I have no problem with
    surrendering to the authorities because I didn't commit any crime
    and was not stripped of my parliamentary immunity from prosecution,"
    he said in a statement circulated by the lawyers.

    Sukiasian and the other opposition lawmakers were stripped of that
    immunity in March 2008. They say that prosecutors had to obtain a
    fresh arrest permission from the National Assembly after significantly
    revising the criminal cases against them in March 2008. The prosecutors
    claim the opposite.

    One of Armenia's wealthiest men, Sukiasian got in trouble with the
    authorities in late 2007 after publicly voicing support for former
    President Levon Ter-Petrosian's bid to return to power. Many of his
    businesses were raided by tax authorities and fined for alleged tax
    evasion. One of them, the Bjni mineral water company, was effectively
    confiscated by the government late last year.
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