MosJan Posted April 5, 2006 Report Share Posted April 5, 2006 AZERI LAWYER FAILED TO UNDERSTAND HUNGARIAN PROSECUTOR * “The prosecutor demanded 30-year imprisonment for Ramil Safarov accused of the murder of Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan,” Safarov’s defender Adil Ismaylov said. Meanwhile as PanARMENIAN.Net agency reported earlier, actually the Hungarian prosecutor demanded life imprisonment at that 30 years without the right of amnesty. The prosecutor said the murder was committed with extreme cruelty and is a threat for the national security of Hungary. He also underscored that when committing the crime Safarov was sane. Adil Ismaylov said that Safarov’s lawyers submitted a petition for one more medical-forensic examination, since the results of the previous ones differ. However the judge declined the petition and said the decision will base on the examinations conducted. Lawyers representing both sides addressed the court April 4. Ismaylov also informed Safarov will make his last statement April 13. It should be noted that Hungarian lawyer Gabriela Kaspar stated that Margaryan’s murder should be classified as genocide since it was committed through national hatred. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lev7 Posted April 5, 2006 Report Share Posted April 5, 2006 HUNGARIAN COURT TO ISSUE VERDICT APRIL 13 ON AZERBAIJANI CHARGED WITH KILLING ARMENIAN Palma Benczenleitner AP Worldstream Apr 04, 2006 A verdict will be issued April 13 in the case of an Azerbaijani officer accused of murdering an Armenian classmate at a NATO training course in Hungary, a court said Tuesday. Lt. Ramil Safarov of Azerbaijan has confessed to using an ax in February 2004 to hack Lt. Gurgen Markarian of Armenia to death, authorities said, in a dormitory that was being used by participants of a NATO Partnership for Peace English language course in Budapest. At the time, police said the murder was committed with "unusual cruelty" and that Safarov had tried, unsuccessfully, to enter the room of another Armenian with the intention of killing him. Police said that Safarov confessed to the killing, claiming that the long-standing conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia was at the root of his act. The two neighboring, former Soviet republics remain at odds over the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan. At Tuesday's hearing, prosecutors asked that Safarov be sentenced to life in prison, with a 30-year minimum before any parole hearings. The Budapest City Court rejected a defense request for a new expert opinion to determine Safarov's mental health. Four earlier examinations already declared him mentally stable and accountable for his actions. "(Safarov's) actions were not guided by hatred, but by the trauma which remains," said his lawyer Gyorgy Magyar, referring to the feud between the two countries. The court said Safarov would make his final statement on April 13, the day of his sentencing. Armenian-backed forces drove Azerbaijan's army out of the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s. A 1994 cease-fire ended the six-year war that killed 30,000 people and left about 1 million homeless and the enclave is now under the control of ethnic Armenians. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 SAFAROV’S VERDICT TODAY Life Imprisonment or…? The Azerbaijani embassy in Hungary refused to hand the Hungarian court alleged 100 thousand signatures witnessing for the defense of Ramil Safarov charged with murdering Armenian serviceman Gurgen Margarian during Nato exercises in 2004. According to Azeri Day.az agency, the 3-member Azeri delegation transporting the signatures to Budapest was rejected an admission to the embassy. As was preliminarily reported, today the Hungarian court will bring in the verdict for the Azeri murderer. In prosecutor’s words, Safarov was sane while committing the crime and deserves 30 years in prison with no right to amnesty. By Aghavni Harutyunian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 can't find any news on it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 hamperutyu@s hatets de aseq et *&(^&*& t@ghu vertict@ imananq inch a linum nerver chmnats el Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Safarov Sentenced to Life Imprisonment 13.04.2006 23:24 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azeri officer Ramil Safarov is sentenced to life imprisonment for murder of Armenian lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan that he committed on February 19, 2004. Budapest court judge András Vaskuti announced the verdict, according to which Ramil Safarov is sentenced to life imprisonment without the right of pardon for 30 years, the Public TV Company of Armenia reports. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Today the Budapest Court brought a verdict on the case of Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan’s murder realized by the Azeri defendant Ramil Safarov. The latter was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment with the right to be forgiven in 30 years’ time. The representative of the RA Defense Ministry Hayk Demoyan informed “A1+” about it. The latter participated in the trial. The judge presented the details of the trial thoroughly in the courtroom rejecting the fact that Safarov doesn’t know Russian, revealing the groundless “intrigues” of Safarov’s lawyers an refuting Safarov’s presumption of innocence. He ended his speech in the following way, “It is not heroism to kill a sleeping man in peaceful conditions; it is a crime and it doesn’t matter which nationality the murdered officer belonged to.” Safarov will serve his sentence in Hungary. By the way, according to the laws of the country people committing crimes in severe conditions serve their terms in special criminal establishments. Safarov’s barristers have a right to appeal against the court verdict within 3 days’ time. At present they are consulting with Safarov in order to make an appeal decision. Let us mention that Hungary has a 3 - level court system, so there are two possibilities to appeal against the decision. The Armenian side is sufficed with the verdict brought by the Hungarian court. “I think the court was just in its verdict,” the representative of the RA Defense Ministry Hayk Demoyan informed “A1+.” Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 Safarov will serve his sentence in Hungary. By the way, according to the laws of the country people committing crimes in severe conditions serve their terms in special criminal establishments. No prison establishment is bad enough for this monster. May be Midnight Express Movie Prison with a sadistic prison guard. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 LIFE IMPRISONMENT FOR ‘NATIONAL HERO’ * Yesterday, the Budapest Municipal Court convicted Ramil Safarov to life imprisonment with no right to amnesty for 30 years. Charged with axing to death Armenian serviceman Gurgen Margarian in his sleep on February 19 2004, Safarov received the ultimate punishment under Hungarian law. All efforts of the Azerbaijani side to portrait Safarov as not guilty proved futile as the evidence of premeditated murder triumphed over Azeris fake proofs. "That was the ultimate verdict for the Hungarian court," Nazeli Vardanian, attorney of Gurgen Margarian, told daily Azg over the phone. Prior to bringing in the verdict the court listened to Safarov’s final words. The embarrassed "national hero" of Azerbaijan said at first that he has a poor command of Russian and the court should review his initial evidence, then he went on the last try to persuade the court that he has mental disorder and murdered Margarian while having an attack. He said he remembers nothing, even why he had bought the axe. He had no intention to murder the Margarian and did not attempt the life of Hayk Makuchian, the other Armenian serviceman. "He said no words of regret; never felt sorry for taking the young Armenian’s life," Nazeli Vardanian added. Upon hearing the verdict, Safarov’s defense said they will file an appeal, though the judge’s words clear up any doubt of the defendant’s guilt. The Azerbaijani "national hero" and "man of the year" will stand the next trial on the second charge on May 3. * By Ruzan Poghosian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Life in Prison for Safarov: Hungarian court reaches verdict for killer of Margaryan By John Hughes From Internet news reports Ramil Safarov, the Azerbaijani Army officer who admitted hacking to death Armenian Army Lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan was sentenced to life in prison by a court in Budapest, Hungary Thursday. http://armenianow.com/images/uploadedimages/ai147301.jpg Margaryan’s killer told a court he was provoked In handing down its sentence the district court said Safarov’s murder was “premeditated, malicious and unusually cruel”. It is the harshest sentence allowable by law in Hungary, where the death penalty was abolished in 1990. Safarov, 29, was also found guilty of plotting to kill another Armenian officer, although the plan was not carried out. He will be eligible for parole in 30 years. On February 19, 2004, Safarov attacked Margaryan while the victim was asleep and, using an axe, mortally wounded the Armenian, nearly decapitating him. "Compassion and remorse were completely missing from (Safarov's) testimony," Judge Andras Vaskuti said, announcing the sentence. "During the whole case we waited for him to be at least a bit sorry for the Armenian soldier he killed brutally and for (Margaryan's) family." The officers were participants in an English-language regional training program, ironically titled “Partnership for Peace”, sponsored by NATO in the Hungarian capital. The killing enflamed smoldering anger between publics in Armenia and Azerbaijan, bitter enemies since the late 1980s, when the Armenians in Karabakh initiated a movement to secede from Azerbaijan in the Armenian-populated Nagorno Karabakh. The enclave had been under Azeri rule since the days of Josef Stalin. The countries have been in an uneasy ceasefire since 1994, after a four-year war. Earlier this year passions were again stirred when an Azeri political party named Safarov “Man of the Year”, sparking angry public demonstrations in Armenia, and leading a fringe party leader to announce a bounty on Safarov’s life, should he not receive the maximum sentence. Safarov has said the murder was a revenge killing, carried out to avenge losses his family suffered during the war. During a statement in court Thursday, however, he denied that the killing was premeditated, saying it was provoked because Margaryan had ridiculed and insulted him during the training program. "My conscience was clouded as a result of the insults and humiliating and provoking behavior, and I lost all control," Safarov told the court. "It would not be correct to consider it as merely a premeditated act caused by the awakening of revenge and hate upon seeing the Armenians." Safarov's lawyer, Gyorgy Magyar, said he would appeal the verdict. He also said it was not clear whether Safarov would serve the sentence in Hungary or be extradited to Azerbaijan. (Republic of Armenia Ministry of Defense representative Hayk Demoyan, who participated in the trial, told A1+ news agency that Hungarian law stipulates that Safarov’s sentence be served in Hungary.) Margaryan family attorney Nazeli Vartanyan called the outcome “a good decision for the Hungarian court and for Armenian society”. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 http://armenianow.com/images/uploadedimages/ai147301.jpg judging by this picture - he has been working on his lips - i just can;t guess was it kissing that he worked on or sucking - in ether case it will be useful an in prison Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Takoush Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 I wish he received a 60 year sentence instead of 30. It's better that he serves his sentence in Hungary. Animal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Safarov’s Defenders Going to Appeal to European Court of Human Rights 14.04.2006 22:30 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian /PanARMENIAN.Net/ “In case the Hungarian supreme court instances do not reconsider Ramil Safarov’s verdict an appeal will be sent to the European Court of Human Rights,” Safarov family lawyer Adil Ismaylov informed. He remarked that the court passed “unfair” verdict to the officer of the Azerbaijani armed forces. “The Hungarian lawyers said they will appeal the verdict. In case the Hungarian Court of Appeals upholds the verdict, the decision will be appealed in the Supreme Court. Then, in case of failure, an appeal will be sent to the European Court of Human Rights,” Ismaylov said, reported Trend news agency. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Appeal to European Court of Human Rights First you need to be a human you *&^&(% SOB - then you can appeal to HUMAN RIGHTS COURT Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Safarov's Sentence Consequence of Azerbaijan's Propaganda Hysteria 14.04.2006 22:18 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian /PanARMENIAN.Net/ “The decision of the Budapest court is the consequence of the propaganda hysteria launched by the ANS TV channel, KLO leader Akif Naghi and other “patriots”, who used the tragedy of the young Azeri officer for their own interests,” editor-in-chief of “Real Azerbaijan” newspaper Eynullah Fatullayev stated. “I think it would be more correct to abandon militaristic accents and apologize to Gurgen Margaryan’s family. We offered to press for smoothing the Armenian position on the issue, prevent the storm of the Armenian Diaspora and succeed in Safarov’s extradition to Azerbaijan. Unfortunately we failed. The Azerbaijani authorities, which crawfished giving ok to the ANS and “patriotic” spirits in Azerbaijan, are to blame for it first of all. I think these “patriots” should be glad to know that Safarov is sentenced to life imprisonment,” he said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Arif Yunusov: Ramil Safarov's Case Ordinary Murder for Europe 14.04.2006 22:07 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian /PanARMENIAN.Net/ “Safarov’s defense was organized incorrectly from the very beginning. Our society had a wrong idea about the legal proceedings in Europe and the Europeans’ attitude to cases of the kind. It’s an ordinary murder for them,” head of the Conflictology Department of the Institute of Peace and Democracy Arif Yunusov stated. In his words, Safarov should have been presented as the victim of the Karabakh conflict. “With availability of confession and some extenuating circumstances Safarov’s sentence could be milder,” he said. “However some politicians launched a gambling on Ramil Safarov's tragedy. Some declared him the Man of the Year and set him as example for the Azeri youth. All these statements reached the Hungarian court and played a negative role for the decision. Unfortunately these statements covered President Aliyev and our Foreign Ministry’s statement that said we regret over the incident,” Yunusov said, reported Day.az. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Rally against Safarov's Sentence to Be Held in Baku Today 14.04.2006 19:32 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian /PanARMENIAN.Net/ April 14 an action in protest against the sentence passed upon Azeri officer Ramil Safarov by the Hungarian court will be held in Baku. As reported by the Organization for Karabakh Liberation, members of Safarov’s defense committee and a group of refugees and displaced persons will demand “to change the punishment meted out to Safarov”. Protest action will also be held in various regions of Azerbaijan, reported Trend. To remind, yesterday the Budapest Court sentenced the murderer of Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan to life imprisonment without the right of pardon during 30 years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phantom22 Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Testimony was given during the trial that Magaryan did not antagonize Safarov in any way. Why was Safarov allowed to lie in his final remarks and why did the media repeat his lies? Life in Prison for Safarov: Hungarian court reaches verdict for killer of Margaryan By John Hughes From Internet news reports Ramil Safarov, the Azerbaijani Army officer who admitted hacking to death Armenian Army Lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan was sentenced to life in prison by a court in Budapest, Hungary Thursday. http://armenianow.com/images/uploadedimages/ai147301.jpg Margaryan’s killer told a court he was provoked In handing down its sentence the district court said Safarov’s murder was “premeditated, malicious and unusually cruel”. It is the harshest sentence allowable by law in Hungary, where the death penalty was abolished in 1990. Safarov, 29, was also found guilty of plotting to kill another Armenian officer, although the plan was not carried out. He will be eligible for parole in 30 years. On February 19, 2004, Safarov attacked Margaryan while the victim was asleep and, using an axe, mortally wounded the Armenian, nearly decapitating him. "Compassion and remorse were completely missing from (Safarov's) testimony," Judge Andras Vaskuti said, announcing the sentence. "During the whole case we waited for him to be at least a bit sorry for the Armenian soldier he killed brutally and for (Margaryan's) family." The officers were participants in an English-language regional training program, ironically titled “Partnership for Peace”, sponsored by NATO in the Hungarian capital. The killing enflamed smoldering anger between publics in Armenia and Azerbaijan, bitter enemies since the late 1980s, when the Armenians in Karabakh initiated a movement to secede from Azerbaijan in the Armenian-populated Nagorno Karabakh. The enclave had been under Azeri rule since the days of Josef Stalin. The countries have been in an uneasy ceasefire since 1994, after a four-year war. Earlier this year passions were again stirred when an Azeri political party named Safarov “Man of the Year”, sparking angry public demonstrations in Armenia, and leading a fringe party leader to announce a bounty on Safarov’s life, should he not receive the maximum sentence. Safarov has said the murder was a revenge killing, carried out to avenge losses his family suffered during the war. During a statement in court Thursday, however, he denied that the killing was premeditated, saying it was provoked because Margaryan had ridiculed and insulted him during the training program. "My conscience was clouded as a result of the insults and humiliating and provoking behavior, and I lost all control," Safarov told the court. "It would not be correct to consider it as merely a premeditated act caused by the awakening of revenge and hate upon seeing the Armenians." Safarov's lawyer, Gyorgy Magyar, said he would appeal the verdict. He also said it was not clear whether Safarov would serve the sentence in Hungary or be extradited to Azerbaijan. (Republic of Armenia Ministry of Defense representative Hayk Demoyan, who participated in the trial, told A1+ news agency that Hungarian law stipulates that Safarov’s sentence be served in Hungary.) Margaryan family attorney Nazeli Vartanyan called the outcome “a good decision for the Hungarian court and for Armenian society”. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 18, 2006 Report Share Posted April 18, 2006 SAFAROV CASE: HUNGARIAN LAWS DO NOT ADMIT EXTRADITION IN CASE OF LIFE IMPRISONMENT * Azerbaijan and Hungary have no agreement on extradition of criminals, lawyer Nazeli Vardanyan, who defends interests of Gurgen Margaryan's family, stated at a news conference in Yerevan. In her words, if there had existed an agreement of the type, Safarov would not be sent to his fatherland. «According to Hungarian laws, extradition is not allowed in case of life sentence. By this Azerbaijan merely disinforms the population on the Budapest trial,» she remarked. Vardanyan also added that the hearing on the second criminal case regarding Safarov due to his attacking the guard will begin on May 3. N. Vardanyan also thanked Armenian media for support and truthful publication Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted April 18, 2006 Report Share Posted April 18, 2006 BAKU KEEPS CLAIMING SAFAROV EXTRADITION * «Extradition of Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan is possible and I hope it will take place. This is possible only after a repeated consideration of the case by Hungarian Court of Appeal though,» Safarov's lawyer Adil Ismaylov said. «According to the Strasbourg Convention of 1983, a person, who has committed a crime abroad, can be extradited for serving his sentence in his fatherland, provided that the punishment will not be changed and he will not be released or pardoned,» he said. In the Azeri lawyer's words, consideration of the complaint of the defense by the Court of Appeal may take a year and only after a decision is passed «extradition may become possible.» Ismaylov called «unfair» the decision of the Hungarian judge, who sentenced Safarov to life imprisonment without the right of pardon within 30 years. «Already at the first trial we felt Hungarians' sympathy towards the Azeri officer. However, later the judge agreed to screening a video material, which showed the headless corpse of Gurgen Margaryan, which created a negative image of Safarov. The judge also made a mistake, when he stated that Hungary can provide a forth interpreter to Safarov (at that time he had interpreters from Hungarian into Russian, Turkish and Azerbaijani), as he may face life imprisonment. We were also discontent with the results of two examinations, the conclusions of which did not always coincide,» Adil Ismaylov specially stressed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 13, 2006 Report Share Posted November 13, 2006 Hungarian Appeals Court Judge: Ramil Safarov’s motives extenuating [ 09 Nov. 2006 17:14 ] The motives that made Ramil Safarov to act this way are not ordinary. The court should pay attention to them and consider as extenuating circumstances,” the judge of Hungary Court of Appeal Andrash Braqyova who is on visit to Azerbaijan told the journalists. Hungarian judge said that Hungary press gives enough information about lifer Ramil Safarov. Braqyova stressed that Armenian Diaspora’s interference to the court affairs is inadmissible. “I do not rule out any political declaration after court’s decision. These declarations can even be made by Azerbaijani President. According to the Hungary Legislation Ramil Safarov’s being granted amnesty or pardon is possible only after trial will over,” he said. It should be noted that the court will consider Ramil Safarov’s appeal in spring next year. /APA/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 13, 2006 Report Share Posted November 13, 2006 MUSEUM HEAD REFUTES TRANSFER OF RAMIL SAFAROV TO AZERBAIJAN * Some media outlets, including Armenian TV companies, made reports according to which Ramil Safarov, who murdered an Armenian officer, Gurgen Margaryan, in Hungary, later may be transferred to Azerbaijan to undergo his punishment there. Safarov was sentenced to life imprisonment by the Hungarian authorities. The reports referred to Androsh Bragiova, judge of the Hungarian Constitutional Court, who supposedly said that Safarov may be transferred later. Haik Demoyan, head of Genocide Museum, who participated in the trial in Budapest as a representative of the Armenian defense ministry, refuted such rumors, saying the information was released by the Azeri media and may possible be misinformation. “We have witnessed Azeri misinformation during the recent few years,” he said. By not excluding the possibility of transfer, the Hungarian judge may have been just diplomatic, Demoyan said. He is sure if the transfer were made, the Armenian parties would have been informed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 18, 2006 Report Share Posted November 18, 2006 Safarov Got Conditional 8-Month Sentence in Addition to Life Sentence * article's photo The trial on the case of Ramil Safarov over the claim laid by jailers was held yesterday at Pesht Central Court. Judge Tot Tendeshun chaired the hearing. According to the Azeri Embassy in Hungary, Embassy officers participated in the hearing as well. After hearing the testimony of two witnesses, the state prosecutor stated in his half-an-hour speech that Safarov is indicted for resistance to officers and inflicting bodily injuries. Safarov got an 8-month suspended sentence in compliance with the Hungarian Criminal Code, reports APA. R. Safarov was sentenced to life imprisonment for murder of Armenian Army officer Gurgen Margaryan in Hungary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 27, 2006 Report Share Posted November 27, 2006 Baku Still Hopes for Safarov Extradition 25.11.2006 14:01 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azerbaijan’s Justice Ministry has appealed to Hungarian Justice Ministry for extradition of Azerbaijani Army Officer Ramil Safarov who was sentenced to life in jail. In the words of Azeri Ministry Officer Zavar Gafarov, Azerbaijan and Hungary both joined the European Convention on Extradition. “I also met Ramil Safarov during my visit to Hungary. He gave me an application for extradition to Azerbaijan. As per the Convention, the extradition can be considered after the sentence becomes final,” he said. It was underscored that Safarov’s case is under strict control of the Ministry. According to the Convention the matter of extradition can be solved after the sentence comes into effect. He said that Safarov’s appeal against the sentence will be considered in April. Gafarov added that Ramil Safarov can be extradited to Azerbaijan after the sentence becomes final. “Both countries are participants of multilateral agreements. They are members of Conventions adopted in 1957, 1959 and 1983. That’s why there is no need for any other bilateral agreement,” he said. Gafarov also said that Justice Ministries of the both countries will conclude an agreement on cooperation in near future, reports APA. Azeri Army officer Ramil Safarov is sentenced to life imprisonment for murder of Armenian Army officer Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted December 17, 2006 Report Share Posted December 17, 2006 SAFAROV'S CASE WILL BE HEARD * The appeal of Azeri officer Ramil Safarov will most probably be heard on February 22 of the coming year. The Hungarian court had sentenced him to life imprisonment for killing Armenian officer Gourgen Margaryan with an ax. According to agency «APA», Safarov's advocates will leave for Hungary on January 15 in order to meet their client. The schedule of the trial will be known th Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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