PROSECUTORS DEMAND TOUGH JAIL TERM FOR ARRESTED EDITOR
By Ruzanna Stepanian
Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
Sept 4 2006
A state prosecutor demanded on Monday four and a half years’
imprisonment for the arrested editor-in-chief of an independent
Armenian newspaper who is standing trial for dodging compulsory
military service.
Zhanna Kotikian, the trial prosecutor, stood by the accusations that
Arman Babajanian of "Zhamanak Yerevan" stole and forged in 2002 legal
documents belonging to the family of a former friend living in the
United States to avoid being drafted to the Armenian Armed Forces.
She described this as a grave crime, citing Armenia’s unresolved
conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.
"Our country is in such a state that even having an extra soldier is
essential for it," Kotikian said in her concluding remarks made at
a district court in Yerevan.
The speech drew sarcastic applause and jeers from a group of "Zhamanak
Yerevan" staff present in the courtroom.
The demanded punishment is quite strict by Armenian standards. Local
draft evaders, most of them members of Christian sects opposed to
military service, are usually sentenced to between two and three
years in prison.
Babajanian’s defense attorney, Robert Grigorian, condemned the
prosecutor’s demand as an "outburst of anger that has nothing to do
with justice." Grigorian said his client should only be convicted of
draft evasion and handed a suspended jail term.
While admitting that he illegally evaded the two-year service,
Babajanian insisted during the two-week trial that he did not steal and
forge the marriage certificate of the Los Angeles-based Vahe Abovian
and his wife Armine as well as the birth certificates of their two
children for that purpose. He said he got hold of the papers through
a middleman who was never questioned by law-enforcement authorities.
Under Armenian law, young men who have at least two children do not
have to serve in the army. Babajanian, 30, studied at an Armenian
religious seminary and had his service deferred until 2001 before
moving to California in 1998. He set up and began publishing his
paper in the Los Angeles area, home to a sizable Armenian community,
in 2003. He launched its publication in Armenia just weeks before
being arrested by law-enforcement officers in his office more than
two months ago.
In a June statement released from his prison cell, Babajanian claimed
that the case against him is aimed at muzzling an "independent and
incorruptible media outlet supporting the removal of the illegal
regime and the establishment of a legitimate government in Armenia."
The prosecutors, however, have denied any political motives.
The young editor was due to deliver his final speech on Monday but
asked the judge for more time to prepare it. The trial will resume
and most probably end on Friday.