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Murder In Gyumri Aggravated Tension

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  • Murder In Gyumri Aggravated Tension

    MURDER IN GYUMRI AGGRAVATED TENSION

    WPS Agency, Russia
    January 20, 2015 Tuesday

    BYLINE: Alexei Gorbachev
    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No 8, January 20, 2015, p. 3

    RUSSIAN AUTHORITIES SHOULD HAVE RESPONED AT ONCE TO STREET PROTESTS
    IN ARMENIA; Expert: Russia is too arrogant when it talks to its
    foreign allies.

    Russian Investigative Committee Chairman Alexander Bastrykin went to
    Armenia to investigate the murder of an Armenian family in Gyumri by
    Russian soldier Valery Permyakov. Presidents Vladimir Putin and Serj
    Sargsjan had discussed the tragedy and its effect on the relations
    between the two countries over the phone.

    The murder in Gyumri was committed on January 12. Following that,
    Permyakov tried to escape into Turkey. He was caught at the border
    and returned to the Russian military base. He is to be tried as a
    deserter, a nuance that enables Russia to deny Armenia its requests
    that Permyakov be given over to the Armenian court. When the news that
    Permyakov was returned to the Russian base became public knowledge,
    mass street protests began in Gyumri and Yerevan.

    Putin phoned his Armenian counterpart Sargsjan with condolences. The
    president assured his colleague that the investigation would be swift
    and thorough and that the guilty would be prosecuted. Putin also said
    that Russian doctors were ready to try and save the only survivor
    Serj Avetisjan, barely six month old. (Serj died yesterday despite
    their efforts.)

    The Russian Defense Ministry dispatched its own delegation to
    Armenia.. to apologize for the crime in person and assist with the
    investigation.

    The Gyumri murder sparked mass protests in Armenia. The police
    dispersed them with unusual brutality... enabling local experts to
    comment that the authorities of Armenia were tied to the Kremlin's
    chariot. Sources claim that protests took place even in Gyumri itself,
    always a fairly pro-Russian town.

    Armenian human rights activists maintain that a good deal of crimes
    in Gyumri were committed by the personnel of the Russian military base.

    "That's because the Armenian authorities do not control the base. The
    impression is that its personnel are a law onto themselves. We know
    for a fact that armed Russian servicemen participated in operational
    investigative activities in Gyumri. How come armed personnel of a
    foreign military base on the territory of Armenia function beyond
    their own compound?" human rights activist Arthur Sakunts said.

    Experts point out that Russia's allies cannot help being wary. "It
    all is a corollary of Russia's foreign policy and manners," said
    Konstantin Kalachev of the Political Expert Group. "It is not
    just absorption of the Crimea I'm talking about. Russia is all too
    frequently arrogant when talking to its allies. It neglects to consider
    their interests. Russia's allies cannot help being offended.

    Nobody wants to be back in the USSR anymore. It is equality and mutual
    respect that everyone aspires to."

    In a word, Russia responded to the tragedy only when its echo affected
    the pro-Russian regime in Yerevan.

    Kalachev said, "Official Moscow should have expressed condolences right
    away... By and large, the Kremlin is overly focused on propagandistic
    aspect of establishment of the Eurasian Economic Union... and not on
    economic expediency."

    [Translated from Russian]

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