
ArmInfo. Archbishop Mikael Ajapakhian, head of the Shirak Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, requires urgent surgery. Garnik Danielyan, a member of parliament from the opposition Hayastan faction, told reporters this on December 8 in parliament, where a closed-door debate on deaths and suicides in penitentiary institutions was taking place.
According to Danielyan, the alarming mortality statistics in prisons reinforce the need for special oversight and accountability. For example, the deputy noted, the number of deaths in penitentiaries has reached 23 in a year, which is an "appalling figure," and only 8 of these were suicides.
"Penitentiaries are extremely overcrowded, which is also a result of the growing number of politically motivated cases," he noted, drawing attention to the case against Archbishop Mikael Ajapakhian.
"This is an extremely sensitive and important issue." "The archbishop must be ensured the surgery is performed a day earlier under the supervision and with the participation of his attending physician," he stated, promising to be consistent in this matter.
He noted that the matter had already been processed through the relevant authorities in accordance with the required procedures. "Ajapakhyan's lawyer filed a corresponding application, but the process is facing bureaucratic delays-specifically, they are demanding changes to the document. We will make the corrections and see if they are delaying the process again," said Garnik Danielyan.
The archbishop was arrested on June 28 by a decision of the Yerevan Court of Primary Instance. The cleric is accused of calling for the violent overthrow of the government. Moreover, these calls were voiced a year ago and were deemed not to constitute a crime by the National Security Service of Armenia.
Nevertheless, according to the Investigative Committee, during the preliminary investigation of the criminal case, clear factual evidence was obtained that M.A. stated in an interview with a news channel that he had repeatedly proposed to two former presidents of the Republic of Armenia to carry out a military coup through generals who held similar positions in the army, police, and national security agencies. "Thus, M.A., using the media, made public calls aimed at seizing power and violently overthrowing the constitutional order," the statement stated. Public criminal prosecution was initiated against M.A. under Part 2 of Article 422 of the Criminal Code (public calls aimed at seizing power, violating territorial integrity, renunciation of sovereignty, or violently overthrowing the constitutional order). Mikael Ajapakhyan, like Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan, and now Archbishop Arshak Khachatryan, are being held in the Yerevan-Kentron penal institution (the famous "KGB basement" in the building of the National Security Service of Armenia).