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Cop Shop Shakeup: Armenian Police Undergoing Personnel Changes Under

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  • Cop Shop Shakeup: Armenian Police Undergoing Personnel Changes Under

    COP SHOP SHAKEUP: ARMENIAN POLICE UNDERGOING PERSONNEL CHANGES UNDER NEW CHIEF
    Vladimir Gasparyan

    ArmeniaNow
    10.11.11 | 12:40

    Photo: www.police.am

    By Siranuysh Gevorgyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Large and smaller personnel changes have been taking place within
    the Armenian national police system after Vladimir Gasparyan took
    over as new chief earlier this month.

    The lieutenant-general known for frequently dispensing with manners
    in dealing with his subordinates is said to have already addressed
    some tough remarks to his new inferiors at a recent meeting.

    While the media have been calling current changes within the police
    a major shakeup and alleging that former chief of military police and
    deputy defense minister Gasparyan, who was appointed Police Chief on
    November 1, has been getting rid of his predecessor Alik Sargsyan's
    loyalists in the system, the police have issued an official statement,
    describing such reports as "rumors and gossip". Police warn that such
    allegations impede their normal operation and have "an adverse effect
    on the moral and psychological atmosphere within the system."

    "The personnel changes taking place within the system are not an end
    in itself and are aimed at improving and enhancing the efficiency of
    work," the police said in the statement.

    Several senior police officers have been dismissed from their jobs
    as part of the ongoing changes. Among them was chief of the police
    in Yerevan's Erebuni district Grigor Grigoryan, whose deputy Mihran
    Keshishyan is now on the run (he is suspected of receiving a $13,000
    bribe and has been sacked from his police job). Chief of the Yerevan
    Police Department Nerses Nazaryan has confirmed that Grigoryan's
    dismissal is connected with the case of his deputy. Gagik Gabrelyan,
    a former senior policeman in Yerevan's Kanaker-Zeytun district,
    has been appointed to succeed him in the post.

    Among those dismissed was also Nor-Nork district police chief Mushegh
    Ohanyan (brother of Margar Ohanyan, the former Road Police Chief, who
    was charged with embezzlement of petrol, dismissed and put in detention
    pending trial earlier this year). Ohanyan was appointed chief of the
    Metsamor division of the Armavir Regional Police Department. Deputy
    Chief on Operative Affairs of the Central Police Department Grigor
    Amirkhanyan was appointed new chief of Yerevan's Nor-Nork district
    police. Interestingly, the former chief of the Armavir Regional
    Police Department was reportedly subjected to disciplinary action over
    "blurred" colors and worn-out appearance of the national flag placed
    on the Metsamor station, "which was not timely sighted by the chief,
    and the flag was replaced with a new one only after a corresponding
    publication in the media."

    Several other dismissals, reshuffles and even demotions have taken
    place in other police departments.

    Yerevan Police Chief Nazaryan, whose possible resignation has been
    a subject of media speculation lately, has been denying such reports
    in recent days more confidently than before. On one occasion he told
    media that the new chief of police had said to him that "we must work
    together better and longer".

    Still before the dismissal of Alik Sargsyan and Gasparyan's appointment
    as his successor the media in Armenia had speculated about Nazaryan's
    ambitions to become the chief of the national police.

    On November 1, when introducing Gasparyan to his future staff,
    President Serzh Sargsyan said that "the police of Armenia needs leaders
    like Vladimir Gasparyan" and that from now on "people will feel more
    protected". In his turn, Gasparyan made assurances that within a short
    period of time the reforms launched in the system would be brought to
    their "logical conclusion" and the tasks set to the police would be
    "solved in due manner", resulting in the enforcement of rule of law
    in society.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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