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Journalist Edik Baghdasarian suffered severe head injuries.
Journalist Edik Baghdasarian suffered severe head injuries.

An Armenian journalist known for writing stories exposing government corruption has been attacked and beaten by unknown assailants, the seventh such incident in the country this year.

Edik Baghdasarian, an award-winning investigative reporter who runs the Yerevan-based online magazine "Hetq," said he had left his office in downtown Yerevan at about 8 p.m. Monday when he was ambushed.

“Right near [my] car, two people attacked me and began to land heavy blows," Baghdasarian told RFE/RL. "I retaliated, and we were exchanging blows. I punched one of them, and since I was holding a mobile phone in my hand at that moment, the phone now has blood stains on it, presumably the blood of one of the attackers.”

Then, according to Baghdasarian, a third person hit him on the head from behind and knocked him unconscious.

He says the attackers ran away after a security worker from a nearby construction site fired a shot into the air.

Baghdasarian was hospitalized with head injuries.

Baghdasarian says he lost a computer disc in the attack that contained several investigative stories he planned to publish. He believes the attack was connected to his reporting.

Police say they are investigating the incident.

Baghdasarian's assault is the seventh reported case of violence against a media representative in Armenia this year. No one has yet been punished for any of the attacks.

(by Astghik Bedevian of RFE/RL's Armenian Service)

Esha Momeni
Esha Momeni
Iran's judiciary sees no obstacles to an Iranian-American student who was detained on security-related charges leaving the country after she was freed on bail last week, a spokesman has said.

Esha Momeni was detained in mid-October during a visit to Iran from the United States to see family and carry out research on the women's movement in the Islamic Republic. She was freed on November 10 after spending almost four weeks in a Tehran prison.

"She is freed on bail. I believe there are no obstacles if she wants to leave her country," judiciary spokesman Alireza Jamshidi told a news conference.

But he added she must return when she is due to appear in court in the case. Asked about a report that the court still held her passport, Jamshidi said: "She would most probably be able to go and get it."

There was no immediate comment from Momeni or her family.

The judiciary has said Momeni was accused of acting against national security and of making propaganda against the Islamic Republic's system of government, a common charge against Iranian dissidents. Momeni holds dual Iranian and U.S. citizenship.

Women's rights activists say Momeni was detained after interviewing campaigners for a film she was working on as part of her studies in California. She was released after a deed to her family's home in Iran was posted as bail.

(by Reuters)

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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