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Former Presidential Candidate Arrested For Hayrikian Attack

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  • Former Presidential Candidate Arrested For Hayrikian Attack

    ARMENIA: FORMER PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE ARRESTED FOR HAYRIKIAN ATTACK

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    March 6 2013

    March 6, 2013 - 9:37am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Italian novelist Umberto Eco would have no trouble transforming
    the turmoil over Armenia's February 18 presidential election into a
    fantasy thriller complete with secret societies, mystical forces and
    evil home repairmen.

    In a fresh subplot in the ongoing Armenia-elects-a-president drama,
    one presidential candidate has now been accused of plotting to
    assassinate another. Meanwhile, a more ordinary stand-off between
    the two main characters -- the official winner and the runner-up --
    continues apace over whether or not the election results were rigged.

    On March 5, Vardan Sedrakian, a mythologist, occultist and failed
    presidential hopeful, was arrested and charged with conspiring to
    kill candidate Paruyr Hayrikian, who survived a shooting attack two
    weeks before the election.

    Sedrakian, who predicted his own arrest (albeit erring by about a
    week), says it was not him; it was the Freemasons.

    Prosecutors have not commented further.

    Finding the basis for this claim could prove an uphill struggle. But
    there is one connection to masonry: two of the alleged attackers on
    Hayrikian reportedly remodeled mythologist Sedrakian's summer house.

    Then, everyone knows, Sedrakian claimed, that Raffi Hovhannisian
    is a representative of California's Freemasons. So, add two and two
    together, he advised, and, of course, American Freemasons would try to
    kill a candidate about whom only 1.23 percent of Armenian voters care.

    Hayrikian says he has never met Sedrakian and thinks the allegations
    are strange.

    And this from a man who might warrant inclusion in an Eco novel
    himself; a Soviet-era dissident who did time in Siberia and claims
    to have survived six prior assassination attempts (including one
    supposedly involving a poisonous snake), he has blamed Russia's
    security services and terrorists for the January 31 assault against
    him.

    Meanwhile, on Armenia' center stage, a more mundane drama unfolds. At
    a March 5 rally of hundreds in downtown Yerevan, Raffi Hovhannisian
    criticized international observers for accepting President-Elect Serzh
    Sargsyan as the election winner, and said that he would continue
    touring around Armenia to raise support for his "Hello Revolution"
    ("Barevolution").

    But today, the secondary characters seem to have stolen the main show.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66646

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