
Published on November 03, 2006
ARMENIA REMAINS SAFE COUNTRY, INSIST POLICE
- Armenia remains one of the safest countries in Europe and the former Soviet Union despite a series of high-profile killings committed this year, the national Police Service insisted on Friday. Lieutenant-General Ararat Mahtesian, deputy chief of the law-enforcement agency, downplayed a 12 percent increase in the number of crimes registered by the Armenian police during the first nine months of this year. Mahtesian argued that 2005 saw one of the lowest crime rates in the country’s history and claimed a continuing fall in the share of murders in the overall crime statistics. “This indicator is very good for the Republic of Armenia compared with that of many other countries,” Mahtesian told reporters, referring to the number of crimes per 100,000 people. The Armenian crime rate is nine and four times lower than the figures registered in Russia and Georgia respectively, and compares favorably with that of many European countries, he said. “This is probably the reason why certain high-profile crimes immediately attract public attention,” added the police general. “Cases which would be somewhat ordinary for neighboring countries are unique for us.” Mahtesian held a news conference one day after attending parliamentary hearings during which the Armenian police was criticized for failing to solve most of the recent high-profile killings. Their most famous victim, senior tax official Shahen Hovasapian, was blown up in a car outside his home in central Yerevan on September 6. Other victims included a businessman, a reputed crime figure and a senior member of the influential Yerkrapah Union of Karabakh war veterans. The killings raised widespread concerns about the situation with crime and rule of law in Armenia. A lack of progress in the ongoing investigations into those crimes is only adding to the concerns. Mahtesian complained that the inquiries are seriously hampered by what he saw as a conspiracy of silence. He said although most of the killings were committed in broad daylight, virtually no eyewitnesses have come forward to help the police track down their perpetrators. But as some lawmakers pointed out during Thursday’s hearings, this only shows the extent of public district in the Armenian law-enforcement agencies. “If a citizen wants to help the police, you know the situation they will find themselves in: they will be unprotected by the police and vulnerable to underworld retribution,” Samvel Nikoyan of the governing Republican Party told Mahtesian. (Photolur photo: Ararat Mahtesian.)

- By Anna Saghabalian
Headlines for November 03, 2006
YEREVAN SEES NO FRESH HIKE IN RUSSIAN GAS PRICE
By Ruben Meloyan
Officials in Yerevan appeared confident on Thursday that Armenia will be unaffected, at least in the next two years, by a possible further increase in the price of Russian natural gas delivered to neighboring ...RUSSIAN FIRM CLAIMS ARMENTEL TAKEOVER
AP
Russian mobile operator Vimpel-Communications said Friday it agreed to buy a 90 percent stake in Armenia Telephone Co. (ArmenTel) from Greece's Hellenic Telecommunications Organization SA for 341.9 ...U.S. URGED TO WITHHOLD PROMISED AID TO ARMENIA
By Emil Danielyan
A leading U.S. human rights organization urged the U.S. administration on Friday to withhold promised economic assistance to Armenia and six other developing countries which it believes fail to meet “reasonable ...ARMENIA REMAINS SAFE COUNTRY, INSIST POLICE
By Anna Saghabalian
Armenia remains one of the safest countries in Europe and the former Soviet Union despite a series of high-profile killings committed this year, the national Police Service insisted on Friday. Lieutenant-General ...KARABAKH SETS CONSTITUTIONAL VOTE FOR DECEMBER
AP
The leader of Nagorno-Karabakh on Friday ordered a constitutional referendum to be held next month. President Arkady Ghukasian set the referendum for December 10, his office said. The draft constitution ...
Most read news (last 7 days)
GERMAN-OWNED MINING GIANT REMAINS ARMENIA’S TOP TAXPAYER
By Emil DanielyanPROSECUTOR’S BROTHER ELECTED YEREVAN DISTRICT CHIEF
By Hovannes ShoghikianKOCHARIAN CONFIRMS RUSSIAN CONTROL OF IRAN-ARMENIA PIPELINE
By Emil DanielyanWORLD BANK APPROVES NEW LOAN FOR ARMENIAN RURAL DEVELOPMENT
By Anna SaghabalianNUCLEAR PLANT CLOSURE ‘PRECONDITION’ FOR CLOSER TIES WITH EU
By Astghik BedevianMORE DETAILS OF RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN GAS DEAL RELEASED
By Anna SaghabalianARMENIAN LIFERS PROTEST AGAINST TOUGHER PRISON REGIME
By Hovannes ShoghikianU.S. URGED TO WITHHOLD PROMISED AID TO ARMENIA
By Emil DanielyanTURKEY INSISTS ON GENOCIDE STUDY OFFER
By Aza Babayan in MoscowTURKISH-DUTCH LOBBYISTS TRY TO PUNISH PARTIES OVER ARMENIAN QUESTION
By Toby Sterling, Associated Press
© AUA
Today in Armenian history- 1839 Publication of the Hatti-Sherif of Gulhane by Sultan Abdul Megid as part of the "Tanzimat".
- 1920 Fall of Hatjen (Western Armenia) to the Turkish army.
- 1972 The Soondookyan monument is inaugurated in Yerevan.
Forum most active discussions
- 38th World Chess Olympiad
- CONFÉRENCE – DÉBAT -"L’AVENIR DE L’ARTSAKH"
- UNSIGHTLY SCUFFLES IN HOLY SEPULCHRE
- Գրաբարի դասեր
- Metalfront Fest 2008
- How to change Armenian keyboard in Windows Vista Home Premium և ոչ միայն
- PHP և MySQL
- Սիվիլիտաս... թե՞ հումանիտաս և սիվիլիտաս
- ԻՆՏԵՐՆԵՏՈԻՄ ՀԱՆԴԻՊՈՂ ՀԱՊԱՎՈԻՄՆԵՐ
- Windows XP
ARMENIAN NEWS
INTERACTIVE NEWS
INFORMATION
MY ARMTOWN

How to quit smoking?
How to write in Armenian on Windows XP?

