11.1% Economic Growth – Export Increases, But Yields To Increasing I

11,1% ECONOMIC GROWTH – EXPORT INCREASES, BUT YIELDS TO INCREASING IMPORT
By Ara Martirosian

AZG Armenian Daily
23/05/2007

In the first four months of this year, according to National
Statistical Service, the economic growth of Armenia was 11,1
percent. In the first quarter of this year the growth index was nearly
the same: 11 percent.

The rate of growth in industry has decreased to 1,7 percent, instead
of 4,3 percent of the first quarter of this year. It is conditioned
by the diminution in electricity production (2,3 %), in consequence
of this the volume in the industry of electricity production has
decreased to 0,2, while the industrial production volume (except the
brilliant industry) has increased to 7,8 percent.

The last index shows that the industrial diversification continues in
any way; the dependence on one branch decreases, and other branches
develop, i.e. chemistry, food and mining industry.

Unfortunately, this index also means that the fall in brilliant
industry continues.

The volume of production has had a miserable growth by 0,7 percent
in agricultural branch, despite of this the retail trade circulation
increased to 11,9 percent. It is recorded 16 percent growth in the
sphere of service. The little growth of 6,4 percent in construction
is surprising; while it was 16,4 percent in the first quarter of
this year.

The medium monthly salary in the first four months of 2007 increased
to 18,3 percent and excelled to 70.000 drams. In the public sector
that index is 51,5 thousand drams, in private sector – 88.000 drams.

Prices rose by 2,1 percent compared with December of last year.

Foreign trade circulation volumes have increased to 42,2 percent,
exceeding 1 billion dollars and getting to 1,2 billion dollars. The
export has increased to 323 million dollars, by 27,1 percent more
than in the first four months of last year. The import has increased
to 870 million dollars, by 48,8 percent more than the index of last
year. The negative balance in foreign trade has deepened to 547
million dollars. In the first quarter the difference between import
and export was 414 million dollars in favor of import. It means that
import increases in fast trends compared with export.

The upward trends (44,4 percent) in export (without brilliant
production) are a little comforting. Import (without brilliant
production) has increased by 59 percent.

U.S., Great Britain, Spain And Italy Prepare To Explain Strategic Im

U.S., GREAT BRITAIN, SPAIN AND ITALY PREPARE TO EXPLAIN STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE OF TURKEY TO FRANCE

Noyan Tapan
May 21 2007

MADRID, MAY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. Spain, Italy, Great Britain and
U.S. supporting Turkey’s membership to the European Union will ecplain
the strategic importance of Turkey to France. Alberto Navarro, the
Secretary of State on Relations with European Union of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs of Spain made such a statement relating to the
statements made by newly-elected President of France Nicolas Sarkozy
concerning hindering from Turkey’s membership to the EU.

Alberto Navarro expressed an opinion that Turkey becomes more and
more European day by day: "France has an important meaning for Europe
because of what one must reckon with it. But Spain, England, Italy
and U.S. will explain the strategic meaning and importance of Turkey
to France. We hope that Sarkozy will change his viewpoint during the
time," he said.

To recap, Prime Minister of Spain Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero met
on May 31 in Madrid with President of France Nicolas Sarkozy.

Only Serge Sargsyan Can Help Hakobkokhyan

A1+

ONLY SERGE SARGSYAN CAN HELP HAKOBKOKHYAN
[02:12 pm] 21 May, 2007

It is already six days the World Box Champion Israel Hakobkokhyan has
been on hunger-strike.

To remind, Hakobkokhyan demanded the Central Electoral Commission
(CEC) to annul the election results of Precinct 11 where he was
nominated on the majoritarian system. Hakobkokhyan has already been
informed that his request is beyond CEC jurisdictions. He will likely
change the venue of the strike or join in the Constitutional action of
the Orinats Yerkir Party.

`Two policemen looked in today and suggested applying to the Chief of
Police Hayk Harutyunyan. The only person who can help me is Serge
Sargsyan, therefore I want to see him,’ Israel Hakobkokhyan says.

Garnik Isagulyan, the Advisor to President Robert Kocharian, visited
Israel Hakobkokhyan today and urged him to cease the hunger-strike.

To remind, Grigor Margaryan won at Precinct 11. He `bought votes and
enjoyed victory,’ Israel Hakobkokhyan says.

LA: Arrest In Slaying Of Armenian Man

ARREST IN SLAYING OF ARMENIAN MAN
By Jason Kandel, Staff Writer

Los Angeles Daily News, CA
May 18 2007

NORTH HOLLYWOOD – An 18-year-old man was in custody today in connection
with a confrontation last month that led to the slaying of an Armenian
man in a street gunbattle, police said.

The identity of the suspect was not immediately released and the
motive for the confrontation has not been determined.

Several other unidentified males, ages 17 to 22, also were being
questioned today about their roles in the death of Marat Manukyan, 18,
who was shot in the 13100 block of Raymer Street in North Hollywood,
said Los Angeles Police Lt. Andy Neiman, who supervises North Hollywood
detectives.

Members of the Eurasian Organized Crime task force – comprised of
federal, state and local investigators – were called to assist North
Hollywood detectives in the investigation.

"At this point we’re not quite sure what incited this fight," said
Neiman. "At this point it’s an isolated murder. It doesn’t appear to
be connected with anything major that we’ve seen yet."

Officers from Los Angeles Police Department’s elite Metro unit fanned
out before dawn today to serve search warrants at six locations
stretching from Van Nuys to Glendale.

At one house in the 6400 block of Matilija Avenue in Van Nuys, police
used flash-bang grenades to try to flush out one man. Paramedics were
on standby in case anyone was injured.

Police cleared the house but found no suspect. They located him later
at a friend’s house blocks away, police said.

Police have not released the name of the man – described as a "person
of interest" – but Hagop Avsharyan, 46, was identified as his father.

Avsharyan said today that police were looking for his son in connection
with a fight at a coffee shop. He said his son’s friends were fighting
but he didn’t know any more details.

He said police had a warrant to search his home and wanted to question
his son, but police didn’t say what the warrant was for.

"I think they are looking for some information from my son," said
Avsharyan, who had been outside his home for several hours while
police searched his home.

"But I think they (were) supposed to call him and ask him to come to
(the) station. I don’t know why they come like this in the middle of
the night and put everybody out, put the gas in the house."

Police also evacuated neighbors on Matilija Avenue as a precaution.

Rafael Grigoryan, 23, said he was forced out of his home and heard
20 shots as police fired flash-bang grenades into his neighbor’s home.

"They said, ‘Come out with your hands up,’" said Grigoryan as he stood
outside his home and police clad in flak vests gathered in the street.

Grigoryan said police briefly detained him and took some information
before releasing him.

Police served the warrants three weeks after Manukyan was killed.

Neiman said Manukyan and some acquaintances had argued with another
group at a Starbucks on Coldwater Canyon Avenue and Victory Boulevard
in North Hollywood.

Neiman said the group continued its dispute later at 13100 Raymer,
a dark and isolated spot near railroad tracks.

A gunbattle ensued and Manukyan was hit, officials said. The suspects
fled and Manukyan was taken to a local hospital where he was pronounced
dead.

Neiman said at least two weapons were involved in the murder. Neiman
said he didn’t know if Manukyan had been armed.

Opposition Rally Calls For Toppling Of Armenian Government

OPPOSITION RALLY CALLS FOR TOPPLING OF ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT

Arminfo
18 May 07

Yerevan, 18 May: A rally of the opposition forces with about 3,000
people has started on Freedom Square in Yerevan.

The leaders, who call themselves the radical opposition, are on
the rostrum.

They are Aram Sarkisyan of the Republic Party; Aram Karapetyan of the
New Times party; Nikol Pashinyan of the Impeachment bloc as well as the
Stepan Demirchyan of People’s Party of Armenia and Yegine Bashiryan,
deputy chairman of the Orinats Yerkir party.

Speaking on behalf of all the organizers of the rally, Pashinyan said
that the abovesaid opposition forces are demanding that the Armenian
Constitution Court declare null and void the results of the 12 May
parliamentary election.

Calls are being voiced at the rally for the continuation of the
struggle "to overthrow the anti-people regime of [Presenter] Robert
Kocharyan and [Prime Minister] Serzh Sargsyan".

After the rally, a march is planned to the Republic Square where a
complex of the government offices is located.

South Ossetia: `Presidents’ Step Up Struggle

A1+

South Ossetia: `Presidents’ Step Up Struggle
[03:13 pm] 19 May, 2007

Georgian government increases support for `alternative’ president of
South Ossetia. `Can’t I just go to the grocery store, it’s just a few
steps away from here?’ asked Svetlana, 36, a resident of the Georgian
village Tamarasheni in the South Ossetia conflict zone, imploring to
be allowed to cross to the other side of checkpoint manned by
peacekeepers on the road between Tamarasheni and another Georgian
village Kekhvi.

The mother said she had to buy some milk there for her
18-month-year-old child, whom she was holding in her arms, but was not
allowed through.

For five days, South Ossetian security personnel have been standing
guard here alongside Russian peacekeepers to ensure that the road
remains closed.

On May 11, the de facto president of South Ossetia Eduard Kokoity
ordered that mobile police checkpoints be set up on roads leading to
Georgian villages in the disputed zone. He said no one should be
allowed to pass except for the holders of Russian and South Ossetian
passports.

The following day there was a fierce exchange of gunfire in the
region, followed by mutual accusations between the two sides about who
had started it. There were no confirmed reports of serious injuries.

For four days all traffic was blocked around the Georgian
villages. Then most vehicles were allowed to move again – but not on
the road between Tamarasheni and Kekhvi, where the situation remains
tense.

`I’m a Chechen and I live in a Georgian village here together with my
husband and children,’ said Svetlana. She was not allowed to go to
the shop, although one Russian peacekeeper, ignoring the evident
disapproval of South Ossetian policemen, volunteered to bring milk for
her.

`Closing the roads is just a piece of intrigue by both our
government,’ said Svetlana. `I have great respect for [the
unrecognised republic in] Tskhinval, but the incident makes me feel
sorry and ashamed for all of them – both your government and ours.’

The flaring of tension in a small armed and ethnically mixed region
has alarmed international observers.

South Ossetia has been a disputed breakaway territory since 1991 when
the region seceded de facto from Georgia after a bloody conflict that
cost around 2,000 lives and resulted in tens of thousands becoming
refugees.

It was regarded as the quietest of the separatist disputes in the
South Caucasus until an upsurge of fighting in 2004. Since then, there
has been constant tension between the capital Tskhinval (or Tskhinvali
as the Georgians call it) and a group of ethnic Georgian villages.

This latest spike in tension followed the decision of Georgian
president Mikheil Saakashvili to create a `temporary administrative
unit’ in the region headed by `alternative president’ Dmitry Sanakoyev
in the heart of South Ossetia.

Sanakoyev, a former South Ossetian defence minister, was named
`president’ in an election conducted on November 12 last year by the
`alternative central electoral commission’ on the Georgian-controlled
part of South Ossetia. The election ran in parallel with a larger
presidential poll in the breakaway republic that was won by incumbent
Eduard Kokoity.

Since then, the small region has had two opposing `presidents’, living
uneasily within a few kilometres of one another, neither of whom are
recognised as legitimate by the international community.

The critical situation was discussed on May 16 at a meeting between
Georgian conflict resolution minister Merab Antadze and Russian envoy
Yury Popov, who co-chairs the Joint Control Commission for resolution
of the conflict.

Both Tbilisi and Moscow blames the other for making the dispute
worse. `The Georgian side is waiting for Russia to give a clear answer
on whether it intends to continue bringing in weapons – directly or in
roundabout ways – to the Tskhinvali region and thereby exacerbating
the situation in the Georgian-Ossetian conflict zone,’ Antadze told
journalists.

In his turn, Popov rejected a key demand of the Tbilisi government,
saying that he saw no reason for Sanakoyev to take part in the Joint
Control Commission’s work.

Sanakoyev is now being feted in Tbilisi. On May 11, he delivered a
speech in his capacity as head of the temporary administration to the
Georgian parliament. Addressing the deputies in Ossetian, he said the
population of South Ossetia had lived in misery for the last seventeen
years, while peacekeeping efforts had failed to `bear fruit’.

Sanakoyev said that the future of South Ossetia lay within
Georgia. `In future, the final result of Georgian-Ossetian dialogue
should be the granting of broad autonomy to the region and the
provision for the Ossetian people of guarantees of political
representation and preservation of its cultural identity within a
single state,’ said Sanakoyev.

On the same day, the South Ossetian interior ministry issued a
statement blaming the escalation of tension in the conflict zone on
what it termed the Georgian authorities’ destructive policy. It said
the roads in the zones had been closed in order to guarantee the
security of the South Ossetian population.

`Ever since April, all travellers have had their passports copied at
Georgian police checkpoints, so a database can be compiled. Many of
them have been subjected to interrogations, illegal detention, threats
and insults,’ said the ministry.

Another official statement by the de facto South Ossetian authorities
said that by his actions in Tbilisi Sanakoyev had become `just another
Georgian official’ and the plan to establish an alternative presidency
had failed.

Kokoity moved to defuse the situation after four days, lifting most of
the blockade on the roads. There were various interpretations as to
why he decided to do so. The Moscow newspaper Kommersant said the
initiative to do so had come from the Russian government, which did
not want another source of tension with Washington during the visit by
US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice.

Ossetian villages had also suffered from the blockade and food could
not be delivered to 16 villages in the Proni Valley for several days.

Georgian experts agree that the latest moves by the government in
Tbilisi have shaken up the situation, but disagree about what this
means.

Political analyst David Darchiashvili, who heads the Open
Society-Georgia foundation, told IWPR that `Sanakoyev’s new
appointment caused the dynamics in the conflict zone to
change’. `[Sanakoyev’s group] was created with Georgian support, but
it is going to become an independent player,’ he said.

Darchiashvili said the decision to close the roads was a sign of fear
on the side of the Kokoity administration. He was afraid that Kokoity
might respond with an act of `provocation’ and said it was important
to keep up dialogue with him `not about political issues, but about
security, demilitarization and free movement’.

Former conflict resolution minister Giorgy Khaindrava said it was
important to keep up negotiations with Kokoity `as he is a reality on
the ground’.

`However, one should keep in mind Russia is behind Kokoity, and he has
nothing to lose,’ he said. `He has exhausted his potential and does
not need peace. Escalation of the conflict is the only way out for
him, and this is a real danger. The state and government exist in
order to foresee all risks.’

By Irina Kelekhsayeva in Tskhinval and Dmitry Avaliani in Tbilisi (CRS
No. 392 17-May-07) Irina Kelekhsayeva is a freelance journalist in
South Ossetia. Dmitry Avaliani is a correspondent for 24 Hours
newspaper in Tbilisi. This article is a product of IWPR’s Cross
Caucasus Journalism Network, supported by the European Union. The
article is republished from IWPR’s Caucasus Reporting Service.

ANKARA: Demirciyan: Parliamentary Elections In Armenia Cannot Be Reg

DEMIRCIYAN: PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA CANNOT BE REGARDED AS FREE AND FAIR

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey –
May 16 2007

Parliamentary elections in Armenia on Saturday cannot be regarded as
free and fair and the new parliament was not formed through a free
expression of the will of the people, the head of the opposition
People’s party of Armenia, Stepan Demirciyan said on Monday.

According to preliminary results, this centre-left party failed to pass
the 5-percent barrier and was not elected to the National Assembly.

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said he would like a constructive
opposition – "political parties of Armenia, not representative offices
of foreign forces" — to be elected to the parliament.

AGBU Nork Children’s Center Beneficiary of Milan Fashion Fundraiser

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Thursday, May 17, 2007

AGBU Nork Children’s Center Beneficiary of Milan Fashion Fundraiser

MILAN, Italy – On Sunday, March 25, over 500 people attended the Sir
James Henderson School’s 2007 charity event in Milan, Italy, initiated
by AGBU member Elisabeth Istanboulli. Among the celebrities attending
the annual fundraiser were Italian actress Silvana Giacobini, Barbara
Snellenburg, Susanna Werner and Brazilian soccer legend, Leonardo.

The Italian charity event at a theatre owned by Donatella Versace, of
the renowned Versace fashion brand, included an impressive fashion show,
as well as several musical and dance performances. Among the event
sponsors were designer brands Gianni Versace S.p.a, Armani, Etro,
Sephora and Swarovsky.

Almost EUR13 000 was raised at the fundraiser, of which 75% went to Gol
de Letra, a Brazilian charity organization that assists disadvantaged
children, and 25% was donated to the AGBU Nork Children’s Center, which
provides instruction in the fields of art, computers, dance, gymnastics,
history, music, language and religion to thousands of children in
Armenia.

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City with an
annual budget of $36 million, AGBU preserves and promotes the Armenian
identity and heritage through educational, cultural and humanitarian
programs, annually serving some 400,000 Armenians in 35 countries.

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org

Christianity In Turkey

CHRISTIANITY IN TURKEY
By Father Jonathan Morris

Fox News
May 16 2007

Last week, when I wrote about the precarious political and religious
situation of this country and what the outcome may mean for world
peace, I didn’t know that just a few days later I would be experiencing
Turkey up-close and in person … but here we are.

Welcome aboard; I will try to be your eyes and ears.

Day 1

I am plane-bound for Asia and Europe, or more precisely, the only
major city that straddles the two. Istanbul is the city of grand
duplicity and, as such, a spectacular case-study for the challenges
and opportunities of globalization — in particular, the integration
or eventual confrontation of Muslim and Christian civilizations.

In Istanbul, suspension bridges connect the geography of east and west,
but also highlight the deep cultural and religious divides of the very
people they seek to unite. These days, Turkey — all of it — also
hangs in suspense, as if on one of the bridges in its flagship city.

When I took this same Al-Italia flight last November, my mission was
well-defined: fill out with color commentary the news that others
would make. The simplicity of it all was comforting. Pope Benedict
XVI would depart a day after me, from the same Roman airport, at the
same time, and on the same airline.

Sure, he was arriving to this 99 percent Muslim country fresh from his
news-making Regensburg address, in which he infamously related Islam
and violence, but I knew the Turkish officialdom was awaiting this
"German shepherd" with open and safe arms. No, they had not forgotten
or forgiven, but they were determined to overlook the diplomatic flap
(and unfortunately the content and deep meaning of the speech too)
with the goal of garnering moral support for their entrance into the
European Union.

In such important company and circumstances, I felt secure. Five
months later, I’m on my own.

Day 2

We hit the ground, and now we’re running. On any story, you try to
get things in order before heading out. My producer was on the phone
for days, organizing the crew, itinerary, and all the production
details. But it isn’t until you touch the local reality that you
really get the important things done.

You meet people and let them talk. You ask questions and connect the
dots between what you have studied before coming and what you are now
hearing. Sometimes what you thought was a great idea for an interview
while sitting in the office, turns out to be less important when you
are steeped in local realism. On the ground, preconceived notions
fade away and the simplistic slogans you’ve heard and read so many
times before reveal themselves for what they are — partial truths
and unstable foundations for meaningful reporting.

Often, something happens unexpectedly and takes over the story. You
meet someone or learn something that invites you — I would even say
commands you — to take another direction.

That’s happening now. One of the readers of this blog lives in
Prague — without knowing I was making plans to come to Turkey,
he wrote to me with inside and fascinating information about the
small Christian communities in Turkey and how they are reacting to
increased violence and persecution by some radical elements within this
country. You may remember that a Catholic priest was killed last year,
then later an Armenian journalist, and finally, just three weeks ago,
three Evangelicals were tortured and brutally murdered because they
professed belief in Jesus.

I responded to this reader’s informative note, now we are now working
as virtual co-workers on this story. I hope someday to meet him in
person. It’s the positive power of the Internet — I’m based in Rome,
FOX News in New York, this reader in Prague, and together we are
working on a story in Turkey.

It was through this reader that I was immediately connected with
the major leaders of the tiny Evangelical and Protestant communities
throughout the country. I assumed these Christians would be hesitant
to talk on camera, and thinking first of their safety, I certainly
wasn’t going to push. But I was interested in hearing first-hand
from them what the status of religious liberty is in their homeland,
whether there is concern about future violence against them, and what
the government is doing about it.

My assumption that they would prefer silence was wrong. They talked
freely and fearlessly about their faith and the situation in which
they live. "This is real martyrdom," said one Christian from the city
of Izmir, with whom I spoke only by phone. "When you, a loyal citizen,
are killed for your faith, and for no other reason. It’s not the fake
martyrdom of killing other people in the name of God. But we are not
afraid. The early Church flourished in times of persecution.

We will flourish too."

Today, we made our way through winding streets in a commercial district
in search of an Evangelical church, where we planned to interview
the pastor. My crew is mostly of Muslim origin. They look Arabic or
Persian and around these parts, that’s a plus. I, on the other hand,
stick out like a sore thumb. People on the streets look at me. Some
of them point. I don’t mind; I guess I am staring too, if I notice
all the stares.

Looking for a Christian church in Turkey is like finding an apartment
in Manhattan — not because there are so many of them, but because
they literally look like ordinary apartments. Here, there are no
high spires, beautiful facades, or church bells to draw you into
Christendom. The churches just blend into their surroundings, so you
have to have the exact address to find one.

We almost missed it. The entrance to the church looked more like that
of a prison — a closed iron gate, behind which stood a stern guard
with a clipboard to welcome you … and to take your name.

Pastor Behnan met us on the street. There were no formalities, and
barely an introduction. "This can’t be the man I’ve been talking to
on the phone over the last few days" I thought to myself. "He would
have greeted me in a different way." But it was. He was just nervous.

"Come with me," he said.

The church was in an upper room. Once inside, it could have been
a Methodist, Lutheran, or Baptist church in a small town in Middle
America: white walls, a simple cross, big lectern, and dark wooden
pews.

"Where do you buy church pews in Turkey?" I wondered to myself.

The crew set up the portable lights and camera as the two of us
chit-chatted. "When everyone comes, we are about 150 people," says
Pastor Behnan, who is now much more at ease.

When I got the word that things were ready, I asked the pastor if we
could start filming. He put on a tie. "No problem."

"Okay, so how is your congregation doing in light of the recent
killings? Are you afraid?"

He didn’t hesitate even a second. "Not at all! Jesus is our strength.

I’ve been jailed many times, and beaten."

"Beaten?" I replied, with emphasis of surprise. "But I thought it
was legal to be Christian in Turkey?"

"It is," he said, "but the police don’t know that, or don’t want
to know it. They take us in, question us, sometimes rough us up,
and then after a week or two, they let us go."

"And why do they let you go?"

"Because they know if the case goes to court, there will be no law
to incriminate us."

Pastor Behnan repeated several times that he has nothing against the
government. He is a loyal Turk, pays his taxes, and is grateful for
the freedom of worship Turkish law permits. "Turkish law is good,"
he said. "We can worship, and we can even translate and offer Bibles
for sale. We never push them on anyone; but they can buy them if
they want."

But in practice, things aren’t so good. On account of widespread
rumors, large percentages of the Turkish population are convinced
Christians are a threat to national unity. Conspiracy theories abound
that promote an environment of mistrust and fear of all non-Muslims.

One rumor I heard from several Muslim Turks, for example, was that
the CIA has trained and sent 40,000 Christian missionaries into the
country to prepare an overthrow of the government.

I asked Pastor Behnan if the killing of the three Christians (whom he
knew personally) was a random terrorist attack that could have happened
in any country, or if, on the other hand, it was representative of
a national problem. His explanation was clear, but not simple.

According to him, while physical acts against Christians have been
rare, it would be inaccurate to say this was a random and isolated
case. Ten young men worked together for many weeks to plan and carry
out the torture and murder. They even pretended to be interested in
Christianity to gain the trust of the men they would later kill.

Pastor Behnan says this premeditated barbarism is fruit of the
misinformation being spread to the masses by some Muslim religious
leaders and even some high-level government officials. He says these
men are purposefully creating an environment that promotes hatred
of Christians, and as long as this sentiment spreads, people on the
fringe will continue to carry out acts of violence in the name of
religion and national unity.

Armenian Police Should Be Answerable For The Death Of A Man In The P

ARMENIAN POLICE SHOULD BE ANSWERABLE FOR THE DEATH OF A MAN IN THE POLICE, THE FORMER OMBUDSWOMAN THINKS

Arminfo
2007-05-16 00:04:00

The entire police system of Armenia together with its chief should
be answerable for the death of a man in the police, the leader of the
public organization "Against legal lawlessness", the former ombudswoman
of Armenia Larisa Alaverdyan said at today’s press-conference.

She also added that the police must give explanation of the incident
and make a statement. and suspicious quiet that proves various rumours
in the society. "We should understand that in this case the police
chief Ayk Arutyunyan is responsible for the incident", Alaverdyan said.

To recall, young director of the capital city "Pandok" restaurant
was invited to the police for a "talk" in connection with murder of
a criminal boss. According to a short press release, Gulyan asked
for water over the talk and remaining alone in the room was trying
to escape. floor window and died>, press-release of the police
says. Gulayn’s relatives are categorically against such an option
of the incident. They think that Levon died because was beaten by
policemen and the latter threw him out of the window so that to hide
the fact. The relatives connected Levon’s death with the first deputy
chief of Criminal Investigation General Department Hovanes Tamamyan
known for his methods of working with the detained people. The police
chief Arutyunyan still keeps quiet. The city prosecutor’s office
initiated a case on the fact according to 110th article of Armenian
Criminal Code.

Today Gulyan’s relatives held an action in front of the police building
with a demand to punish those who are guilty of his death.