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Probe Of Armenian Police Custody Death 'Widened'

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  • Probe Of Armenian Police Custody Death 'Widened'

    PROBE OF ARMENIAN POLICE CUSTODY DEATH 'WIDENED'
    Ruzanna Stepanian

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/a rticle/2034613.html
    06.05.2010

    Armenia -- Head of the Helsinki Civil Assembly Vanadzor office Artur
    Sakunts at a press conference, Yerevan, 06 May 2010

    A law-enforcement body investigating the latest suspicious death of a
    criminal suspect in Armenian police custody said on Thursday that it
    is trying to contact and question two key witnesses who left Armenia
    just days after the incident.

    The Special Investigative Service (SIS) at the same time implicitly
    denied allegations that they too were ill-treated at the police
    station of the central town of Charentsavan and then forced to flee
    the country.

    Norayr Chilian and Arayik Arakelian were among several Charentsavan
    residents who were detained on April 13 on suspicion of involvement in
    the reported theft of 1.5 million drams ($3,900) worth of goods from a
    local entrepreneur. One of them, Vahan Khalafian, died in still unclear
    circumstances several hours later. The Armenian police acknowledged
    on Friday that he was beaten up before allegedly committing suicide.

    Unlike three other suspects, Chilian and Arakelian were set free
    later on April 13. According to the families, they left for Belgium
    and Russia respectively several days later.

    Artur Sakunts, an Armenian human rights campaigner who met both men
    before their departure, claimed on Thursday that the police forced
    them to go abroad to avoid their embarrassing witness accounts of
    torture. "During our conversations, they did not speak about their
    [forthcoming] departure from the country," he said.

    "Usually, those fleeing [the country] are important witnesses who are
    too dangerous to give testimony. Therefore, that means they were very
    important witnesses in the case and they were simply forced out,"
    Sakunts told a news conference.

    Sakunts, who is based in the northern city of Vanadzor, also stood
    by his claims that at least one of them, Chilian, was beaten up and
    seriously injured by Charentsavan policemen.

    The SIS effectively denied these allegations later in the day. In a
    three-page statement, it said the wives of both men have testified
    in writing that their husbands bore no signs of physical violence
    after being let go by the Charentsavan police. They were also cited
    as insisting that Chilian and Arakelian went abroad on April 16 and
    April 18 respectively for purely economic reasons.

    "It is obvious that some people are attempting to use the incident
    that took place at the police department of Charentsavan to mislead
    the public with evidently false information," the SIS charged in a
    clear reference to Sakunts.

    A SIS official told RFE/RL's Armenian service separately that the
    law-enforcement body is now ascertaining Chilian's and Arakelian's
    precise whereabouts to try to question them on the Charentsavan
    affair. The official said investigators would specifically like to
    know how they were treated by local policemen and whether they can
    shed more light on Khalafian's death.

    Two of those officers are currently under arrest pending
    investigation. One of them was charged last week with beating up
    Khalafian after the latter's refusal to confess to the crime. The
    police insist that the 24-year-old stabbed himself to death after
    the torture.

    The victim's relatives believe, however, that he was tortured to
    death. Sakunts again endorsed this view at the news conference.

    It is still not clear whether the SIS agrees with the murder theory or
    backs the police version of events. The SIS said on Thursday that the
    crucial forensic examinations of Khalafian's body are still not over.
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