ArmInfo. Artsakh lawyer Roman Yeritsyan accused the Investigative Committee of Armenia of showing a frivolous and passive approach to reports of torture of citizens by police officers.
According to him, in most cases, the Investigative Committee cites the lack of official statements or evidence as an excuse, and sometimes even refers to a "non-working day".
In this vein, he noted that he himself contacted the Investigative Committee of Armenia regarding the beating of 28-year-old participant in the Artsakh wars Tigran Ulubabyan, who became a victim of violence by police officers in Vanadzor.
"Nevertheless, despite the apparent grounds for arrest, at the moment we do not have a detained police officer, nor even an initiated criminal case or, at least, interest from the Investigative Committee. Instead, we receive absurd explanations: allegedly they did not receive the message," Yeritsyan noted.
The lawyer pointed out the presence of double standards in initiating criminal cases by law enforcement agencies. For clarity, he cited the example of the arrest of the mayor of Stepanakert, the incident with the pensioner who threw an apple at Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the confiscation of cars brought by Artsakh residents and the detention of demonstrators on June 12, hinting that such cases are investigated more actively.
"The Investigative Committee and the Prosecutor's Office do not care that an orphan boy, the son of a deceased serviceman and a participant in three wars, is illegally held in a police station for seven hours, subjected to beatings and humiliation. All this is happening only because he does not agree to take responsibility for the robbery. At the same time, the 28-year-old woman who suffered from this crime is more worried about Tigran Ulubabyan's health than about her own well-being and the safety of her two- year-old child," Yeritsyan said.
The lawyer recalled that the Investigative Committee of Armenia even has a department for investigating crimes related to torture and abuse of office. In this regard, Yeritsyan called on investigators to fulfill their duties and once again emphasized the need to hold accountable the police officers involved in the torture of Tigran Ulubabyan. He emphasized that the impunity of the police gives rise to new and more serious crimes.
Roman Yeritsyan also reported that the video that was distributed on the same day, where a young man with an Artsakh flag in his pocket is seen being taken away from a police station by an ambulance, has nothing to do with the case of Tigran Ulubabyan. According to him, this is a different case.
After the uproar in the press, the Armenian Ombudsman Anahit Manasyan responded to the situation, calling it alarming and assuring that such cases are under the direct attention of the human rights defender.
Earlier the lawyer reported on his page that in the city of Vanadzor, two armed masked men illegally entered an apartment rented by an Artsakh family, threatened to kill first a 28-year-old woman, then her young child, and stole jewelry from the house. In connection with the incident, the victim, together with her relative, 28-year-old Tigran Ulubabyan, contacted the police. As the lawyer said, at the police station, Tigran was taken to the chief's office, where he was urged to take responsibility for the robbery. Having received a sharp and negative response, the chief of the department instructed the police to "process" Tigran. After 7 hours of illegal detention at the police station, Tigran was released, urging him not to tell anyone about what happened. Yeritsyan also reported that Tigran is receiving threats against the background of an attempt to publicize the details of the robbery that took place.
Tigran Ulubabyan's father and brother were killed in Artsakh, and his mother died. Although Tigran is the only son in the family, he participated in the four-day, 44-day and recent Artsakh wars.