Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05YEREVAN1748
2005-09-29 12:00:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Yerevan
Cable title:  

TIP: UZBEK TRAFFICKING CONVICTION LEAVES CONCERNS

Tags:  PREL PHUM PGOV AM KTIP 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 YEREVAN 001748 

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/CACEN, DRL
G/TIP FOR JENNIFER DONNELLY

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/28/2015
TAGS: PREL PHUM PGOV AM KTIP
SUBJECT: TIP: UZBEK TRAFFICKING CONVICTION LEAVES CONCERNS
ABOUT JUDICIAL CONDUCT

REF: YEREVAN 1320

Classified By: DCM A.F. Godfrey for reasons 1.4(b,d)

-------
SUMMARY
-------

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 YEREVAN 001748

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/CACEN, DRL
G/TIP FOR JENNIFER DONNELLY

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/28/2015
TAGS: PREL PHUM PGOV AM KTIP
SUBJECT: TIP: UZBEK TRAFFICKING CONVICTION LEAVES CONCERNS
ABOUT JUDICIAL CONDUCT

REF: YEREVAN 1320

Classified By: DCM A.F. Godfrey for reasons 1.4(b,d)

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


1. (C) On September 22, a local-level court in Yerevan
sentenced Uzbek citizen Natella Saghatelyan to five years
imprisonment for trafficking and forgery. The Armenian
National Security Service (NSS) arrested Saghatelyan in March
2005 for trafficking Uzbek women, and a minor girl, through
Armenia to Dubai and Bahrain. Saghatelyan's conviction marks
the third instance in which an Armenian court has tried
defendants under anti-trafficking statutes since Parliament
adopted a new Criminal Code in April 2003. Saghatelyan's
conviction carried the toughest sentence yet. Though
Saghatelyan's prosecution is encouraging, Judge Iskuhi
Vardanyan demonstrated an absolute lack of understanding of
trafficking issues. Throughout the trial, Vardanyan made
inappropriate statements about the victims, denied their
requests for legal counsel, and brutally cross-examined them
about their "willing participation." The United Methodist
Committee on Relief (UMCOR) has sheltered the victims since
March and, with help from the International Organization for
Migration, will soon repatriate them to Uzbekistan. End
Summary.

--------------
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT, SOMETIMES
--------------


2. (SBU) On September 22, Judge Iskuhi Vardanyan sentenced
Uzbek citizen Natella Saghatelyan to a total of five years
imprisonment for trafficking (four years) and forgery of
travel documents (one year). The conviction carried the
stiffest sentence meted out by an Armenian court since
Parliament adopted the Section 132 anti-trafficking statute
in April 2003. (Note: Under Armenian law, four years is the
minimum punishment available for human trafficking
convictions under aggravated circumstances, such as the
exploitation of a minor. End note.) In addition to
Saghatelyan, the court charged two local defendants as
accomplices. A second defendant, Nshan Zakaryan, sheltered
the victims in his house and helped to transport them within

Yerevan. The court released Zakaryan after suspending his
four and one half years prison sentence. Hovsep Ananyan, an
employee at Yerevan's Zvartnots Airport, was convicted under
Article 35 of the Armenian Criminal Code (Forgery, Sale or
Use of Forged Documents) after passing a false passport to
one of the victims after she exited border control. Ananyan
paid a USD 550 equivalent fine, which the prosecutor appealed
in favor of a harsher sentence.

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CASE DETAILS
--------------


3. (SBU) According to court reports, Saghatelyan was a link
in the chain of traffickers that started in Uzbekistan and
ended in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. The victims,
Lola Abdulaeva (age 26),Maria Khmelevo (age 19),and Karina
Yeremyan (age 17) initially enlisted with the traffickers
voluntarily, intending "to improve their families' harsh
financial conditions through prostitution" in Dubai.
Saghatelyan and other members of the trafficking network,
however, compelled the victims to turn proceeds over "to
cover accumulated debts for visas and other costs."
Saghatelyan received the victims in Yerevan and attempted to
facilitate their transit to Dubai, where local pimps waited
at the airport. Saghatelyan, a citizen and usual resident of
Uzbekistan, reportedly succeeded in facilitating the transit
of only one girl, Nigina Majidova, to Bahrain. (Note: The
investigation did not reveal any information about Majidova's
fate. End Note.)


4. (SBU) The Armenian National Security Service apprehended
Saghatelyan after UAE officials deported -- and returned to
Yerevan -- victims Maria Khmelevo and Lola Abdulaeva for
traveling on false passports. Investigators discovered the
youngest victim, Karina Yeremyan, at Nshan Zakaryan's house
where they arrested Saghatelyan. The NSS referred all three
victims to a USG-supported United Methodist Committee on
Relief (UMCOR) anti-trafficking shelter. UMCOR will
repatriate the victims (with the assistance of the
International Organization for Migration) for care at a
shelter in Uzbekistan.
-------------- --------------
COURT PROCEEDINGS HIGHLIGHT INSENSITIVITY AND BIAS
-------------- --------------


5. (C) Over the course of the three-month trial, Judge Iskuhi
Vardanyan denied the women access to legal counsel by holding
them as "witnesses" rather than victims, a common practice in
Armenian criminal cases. Under Armenian law, witnesses are
not guaranteed access to legal counsel. At hearings we
attended, we noted that the state-provided translator (both
the main defendant and the victims spoke Russian) selectively
translated court instructions and frequently interjected with
her own comments. Judge Vardanyan permitted the translator
to respond for the victims without first consulting them.
Vardanyan also made frequent inappropriate remarks, pointing
and yelling angrily that "the fight against trafficking
should start with them (the victims)." Vardanyan, the
prosecutor, and the defense attorney cross-examined the
victims for hours as they stood at a podium in the center of
the room the entire time.

-------------- --------------
COMMENT: ENCOURAGING CONVICTION, DISCOURAGING CONDUCT
-------------- --------------


6. (C) Though Saghatelyan's conviction is encouraging (most
trafficking cases here are prosecuted under the lesser charge
of pimping),the court -- and Judge Iskuhi Vardanyan in
particular -- demonstrated an absolute lack of sensitivity
for trafficking victims during the trial. Though we have
worked with police, prosecutors, journalists, IOM, and UMCOR
to press the USG's anti-trafficking benchmarks, Vardanyan's
courtroom display highlights the long road ahead for the
judicial sector.
EVANS