Armenian second president Robert Kocharyan's spokesperson Victor Soghomonyan has commented on the reports that the Russian Prosecutor General's Office investigates a corruption case where the name of the second president is mentioned.
Soghomonyan called such reports nonsense. He thinks that it is the same as if a citizen of Armenia appeals to the Prosecutor General's Office of Armenia for criminal proceedings against ex-president of the USA George Bush and then receives a notification from the Prosecutor General's Office that his letter has been received.
"If that citizen draws a conclusion from that notification that the Prosecutor's Office has launched investigation in Bush's case, he needs a psychiatric aid. Unfortunately, the same applies to those few journalists and politicians that take seriously such publications and try to make 'shocking' resolutions. Obviously, long and useless search for compromising information against Robert Kocharyan makes some people use such primitive methods and invent such fairytales," Shoghomonyan says.
Earlier, Armenian mass media reported citing the letter received by the Administration of the Russian President that there is a case in charge of the RF Prosecutor General's Office where the name of the second president of Armenia Robert Kocharyan is mentioned. This happened after Marina Galuchenko, Head of the Public Relations Office of the National Anti-Corruption Committee of Russia, sent a letter to Vladimir Putin informing that they have documents from Armenia containing facts of Robert Kocharyan's involvement in big business. That was in the period of Kocharyan's presidency and not after his term.