Appendix II: Attacks on the Press in Armenia, 1996-97

Lragir published an article on February 7 titled “Greater Armenia within Small Borders,” which called for the restoration of historical Greater Armenia with its original borders and proposed a plan for achieving that goal by 2000. The Ministry of Justice warned the newspaper it would annul its registration if similar publications appeared in the future.

The paper published another article on historical issues by the same author on February 22. One paragraph was deemed anti-Georgian by the government of Georgia, which issued a diplomatic note of protest. The Armenian justice ministry took Lragir to court, which resulted in suspension of its publication.

The paper resumed publication on June 22.

During two press conferences held on April 23 and 25, the majority of Armenia’s media outlets protested the recent events involving Azg and expressed solidarity with the newspaper’s staff. They also made a public appeal to president Levon Ter-Petrossian as well as to the Chief of the Constitutional Court and to the State Prosecutor.

On May 14, Azg started publishing again as an independent newspaper, after the Spandarian district court in Yerevan on ruled on May 8 that the Justice Ministry’s decision had been unlawful.
 
 

The paper accused the authorities of deliberately targeting them for censorship because Molorak had recently published strong criticism of the draft press law proposed by the information minister. The minister had also been the target of personal attacks in the paper. Printing resumed on July 6.

Kivirian was scheduled to reappear before a court on February 7 on charges of “participation in mass disturbances.”

Mkrtchian, a leader of the opposition party Dashnaktsutiun (Armenian Revolutionary Federation), became a free-lancer after working for the Russian-language opposition daily Golos Armenii. In a statement received by Reporters Sans Frontières on October 15, Mkrtchian said his interrogators “became furious and aggressive” when he told them his name. They reportedly said: “Ah, so this is Gagik Mkrtchian of Golos who wears us out and drives us crazy. At last we’ve laid our hands on you.” Mkrtchian said, “They started to beat me severely. I do not want to describe the horrible details of that beating. I just want to stress that, according to what they said, they beat me for my articles, because I was a journalist.”

After several beatings, Mkrtchian was transferred to a cell in the National Security Ministry. He remained in great pain for several days, which made it difficult for him to either lie down or move around His three cell-mates had to take care of him “like a child,” he said. The journalist was freed on October 5 after spending 10 days in jail.

When Interior Ministry police returned the camera to Nazaryan 10 hours after it was confiscated, Defense Ministry soldiers on the scene immediately grabbed him, beat him, and then returned him to his office, warning him not to file such reports. A Defense Ministry major told Nazaryan that he should not have filmed tanks on the streets. The major warned another television company, A1+, which shared studios in Yerevan with ORT, that it could suffer reprisals as well if it did not “keep in line.”

Harutiunian told officials that Krikorova was the author of the dispatch; a Noyan Tapan official told CPJ the agency does not conceal authors’ identities. Harutiunian and Arakelian spoke with ministry officials for several hours but refused to reveal the source of the news. Krikorova, who was detained in the ministry for about seven hours, suffered some physical and mental distress.

On June 27, CPJ sent a protest letter to Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrossian condemning administrative pressure on journalists to reveal sources of information.

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