ANKARA: Amnesty Request Denied For Armenian Who Shot Turkish Consul

AMNESTY REQUEST DENIED FOR ARMENIAN WHO SHOT TURKISH CONSUL IN LOS ANGELES

Hurriyet, Turkey
Jan 15 2007

Hampig Sasunian, currently serving a life sentence for the murder
of Turkish Consul Kemal Arikan in Los Angeles in 1982, admitted to
this past week to the amnesty board to which he had applied for
a lighter sentence "My partner and I had been planning to murder
Turkish diplomats in Europe."

Sasunian’s request was overturned by the board, but had it not been,
Turkey would have requested Sasunian’s extradition from the US anyway.

Speaking to the Hurriyet, David Saltzman, who has been representing the
Turkish side of the case since 1993, said "We will request Sasunian’s
extradition at the time we see most fit. He is not a US citizen,
but in fact a Lebanese citizen. There is an agreement between Turkey
and the US on extradition of criminals. If Sasunian is freed here,
he will be sent immediately to Turkey."

Sasunian had ties to two radical Armenian groups

Sasunian, who has ties to the Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
which Saltzman noted was the "armed wing" of the Armenian Genocide
Justice Commandos, put the amnesty board into a "deep silence" when
he made the admission that he and a partner had been planning on
carrying their killing spree to Turkish diplomats living in Europe.

Asserted Salzman "Sasunian told of many things he had never said
before, but there is still a lot he is hiding."

Well-known Armenian lawyer Geragos defending Sasunian

The current Turkish Consul to Los Angeles, Engin Ansay, watched the
proceedings with Sasunian on the condition that he remain silent.

Sasunian’s lawyer is the well-known Mark Geragos, who told the amnesty
board from the very start "I too am an Armenian." He added "The Turks
cut open the bellies of pregnant Armenian women with their bayonets."

The murder of Turkish Consul Kemal Arikan in 1982 took place as Arikan
was on his way to work in a private vehicle. The gunfire which sprayed
Arikan from both sides in his car killed him immediately.

Kirkor Saliba, who carried out the murder with Sasunian, was later
killed himself in Lebanon. No one knows who killed Saliba.

Said lawyer Saltzman, "The case of Hampig Sasunian is important,
because it represents a period when Turkish diplomats were being
massacred. We have been going after them step by step for years now.

Sasunian is the only murderer left over from that period."