Wednesday, February 9, 2022 Jailed Militant Slams His Former Leaders • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia -- Sasna Tsrer party leaders Zhirayr Sefilian (right) and Varuzhan Avetisian (left) at a press conference in Yerevan, December 25, 2018. A member of the armed anti-government group that seized an Armenian police base in 2016 has blamed his former leaders for his imprisonment, saying that they sacrificed him for the sake of their own freedom and interests. The group called Sasna Tsrer stormed the base in Yerevan to demand that then President Serzh Sarkisian free Zhirayr Sefilian, the arrested leader of their wider opposition movement, and step down. Its members took police officers and medical personnel hostage. They laid down their weapons after a two-week standoff with Armenian security forces which left three police officers dead. All but two of them were released from custody shortly after Sarkisian was toppled in the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” led by Nikol Pashinian. Sefilian was also set free. The two other militants remained behind bars because of facing murder charges denied by them. One of them, Armen Bilian, was set free in February 2021 when a Yerevan court acquitted him of killing one of the three policemen, Warrant Officer Gagik Mkrtchian, in a high-profile trial of nine former gunmen. Armenia -- Armen Bilian. In December, the Court of Appeals accepted prosecutors’ demand to overturn the acquittal and sentence Bilian to 25 years in prison. He was arrested again in the courtroom. The court upheld a 25-year-old prison sentence for Smbat Barseghian, a defendant convicted of killing the two other policemen. It also rejected appeals filed by the seven other Sasna Tsrer members whom the lower court sentenced to between 6 and 8 years in prison. Unlike Bilian and Barseghian, they remain at large pending an appeal to the higher Court of Cassation and its decision on the case. In a series of statements made from his prison over the past month, Bilian not only continued to protest his innocence but also hit out at Sefilian and Varuzhan Avetisian, the Sasna Tsrer leader. He said they knew that he did not kill the policeman but still helped to jail him as part of a secret deal with the current authorities. “They did not object to the investigators’ decision to indict me because of being their accomplices,” Bilian claimed in his latest statement publicized last week. Armenia - Gagik Mkrtchian, a police officer killed in the July 2016 attack on a police station in Yerevan. “In 2016, Zhirayr [Sefilian] already knew who the real shooter was,” he said. “He hasn’t done anything to clear me of the accusation. He has done everything to ensure that I remain accused.” Avetisian, who received a 7-year prison sentence, categorically denied the accusations. He insisted that he and Sefilian are in opposition to Armenia’s current government as well and could not have cut any deals with it. “These are just baseless and ludicrous suppositions which are impossible to answer,” read a statement issued by Avetisian late last month. More than three years ago, Avetisian also fell out with another leading member of Sasna Tsrer, Pavlik Manukian. The latter claimed in 2018 that the policeman was “accidentally” shot dead not by Bilian but another gunman, Eduard Grigorian. Armenia - A general view of Yerevan police station seized by supporters of fringe jailed opposition leader Zhirair Sefilian, July 30, 2016. Alec Yenigomshian, one of the organizers of 2016 demonstrations in support of Sasna Tsrer, has added his voice to Bilian’s allegations. Yenigomshian has accused Sefilian and Avetisian of complicity in what he sees as a murder cover-up. A spokesman for Armenia’s Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian insisted this week that the murder charge leveled against Bilian was backed up by sufficient evidence. “If there are individuals who possess concrete evidence to the contrary not known to the court and investigators, they can use legally defined procedures for presenting it,” the official, Gor Abrahamian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. Armenian Authorities Facilitate Prosecution Of Judges • Astghik Bedevian Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Civil Contract party attend a session of parliament, Yerevan, February 9, 2022. In last-minute amendments condemned by opposition lawmakers as another blow to judicial independence, the Armenian parliament voted on Wednesday to make it easier for law-enforcement authorities to indict and arrest judges. The authorities need permission from the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC), a state body overseeing Armenian courts, to launch such criminal proceedings. The SJC also has the exclusive authority to take disciplinary action against judges. Such decisions have until now had to be backed by at least seven of the SJC’s ten members. Under a bill pushed through the National Assembly by its pro-government majority, five members will be enough to give the green light to punishing judges accused of various violations. Amendments lowering this threshold were not included in the initial version of the bill approved by the parliament in the first reading last month. They were unexpectedly added shortly before its passage in the second and final reading on Wednesday. Opposition parliamentarians deplored this fact. They also said Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s administration will use the amendments to step up pressure on independent-minded judges reluctant to execute government orders. Artsvik Minasian, a senior deputy from the main opposition Hayastan alliance, argued that five members of the SJC were installed by the current and previous parliaments controlled by Pashinian. The other members were chosen by an assembly of the country’s judges. Armenia - The Supreme Judicial Council holds a hearing in Yerevan, July 26, 2021. Vladimir Vartanian, a co-author of the bill representing the ruling Civil Contract party, dismissed the opposition concerns. He claimed that the main purpose of the legislation is to make sure that judges do not commit abuses when multiple vacant seats in the SJC are not filled on time. The controversial bill was passed two days after an Armenian judge was arrested on charges stemming from a recent decision which he made during an ongoing trial presided over by him. The judge, Boris Bakhshiyan, has said that he is prosecuted in retaliation for granting bail to a jailed opposition figure late last month. The leadership of Armenia’s Union of Judges has also decried Bakhshiyan’s arrest. In recent months, Armenian opposition groups, lawyers and some judges have accused Pashinian’s government of seeking to increase government influence on Armenian courts under the guise of judicial reforms. The authorities deny this, insisting that the reforms are aimed at increasing judicial independence. In a joint statement issued last month, a group of judges charged that the authorities want to curb judicial independence through disciplinary proceedings against them and their colleagues. The number of such proceedings increased significantly last year after a new bill empowered the Armenian Ministry of Justice to demand disciplinary action against judges by the SJC. Armenia -- A courtroom in Yerevan. There are also growing concerns about the effective suspension of a computerized system of random assignment of all cases to judges. The system using special software was designed to minimize government and law-enforcement officials’ influence on judicial acts. Last summer, Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) confiscated the computer carrying the software in what it called a criminal investigation into the integrity of the automated selection of judges. The NSS has still not returned the software, allowing court chairpersons to continue to assign court cases at will. Opposition figures and lawyers say the authorities are thus able to pick judges, who rarely reject arrest warrants sought by prosecutors, for handling politically motivated cases. Opposition Mayor To Remain In Jail Despite Election Win • Marine Khachatrian Armenia - Goris Mayor Arush Arushanian. Armenia’s Court of Appeals refused to release the arrested mayor of the southeastern town of Goris and surrounding villages on Wednesday nearly four months after his opposition bloc’s victory in a local election. The 30-year-old mayor, Arush Arushanian, is one of the four heads of major communities of Syunik province who were arrested shortly after the June 2021 parliamentary elections on various charges rejected by them as politically motivated. They all demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation before joining the main opposition Hayastan alliance formed by former President Robert Kocharian in the run-up to the snap polls. Arushanian stands accused of trying to buy votes. Law-enforcement authorities claim that he ordered the head of a village close to Goris to provide financial aid to local residents who will promise to vote for Hayastan. Arushanian strongly denies that, saying that the poverty benefits approved by the local council were allocated on a regular basis and had nothing to do with the general elections. The criminal case against him is based on incriminating testimony given by the village chief, Lusine Avetian. The latter reportedly withdrew her testimony during their trial that began in November. A Syunik judge presiding over the trial refused to free Arushanian on bail. The Court of Appeals upheld the decision following an appeal lodged by his lawyers. Armenia - Former President Robert Kocharian speaks at an election campaign rally held by his Hayastan alliance in Kapan, administrative center of Syunik province, June 7, 2021. Two of the three other jailed Syunik community heads, who were elected to the Armenian parliament on the Hayastan ticket, were set free in December after the Constitutional Court deemed their arrest illegal. The third community chief, Manvel Paramazian, was freed in October only to be arrested again on Monday after the Court of Appeals overturned a Syunik court’s decision to grant him bail. Incidentally, the judge who made that decision was also arrested on Monday on charges which he rejects as government retribution. During a hearing on Tuesday, Rubik Mkhitarian, a Court of Appeals judge, assured defense lawyers that the controversial arrest of his colleague will not influence his decision on whether or not Arushanian should remain in detention. The hearing took place as dozens of opposition activists and lawyers critical of the Armenian government gathered outside the court building in Yerevan in a show of solidarity with Arushanian. They insisted that he is a political prisoner. The government and prosecutors deny any political motives. A bloc led by Arushanian defeated Pashinian’s Civil Contract party by a wide margin in a municipal election held on October 17 three months after the Goris mayor’s arrest. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.