The company asked 1,101 citizens who participated in a telephone survey conducted by the GALLUP International Association whether there are political prisoners in Armenia today.
The answers were distributed as follows:
62 percent of respondents confirmed the existence of political prisoners in the country with a “yes” answer,
20 percent found it difficult to answer,
And 18 percent indicated that there are none.
And to the question of who citizens consider a political prisoner, the answers are as follows:
71.5 percent considered Samvel Karapetyan a political prisoner,
38.5 percent considered Bagrat Srbazan,
37.8 percent considered Mikael Srbazan,
9.6 percent considered Armen Ashotyan,
4.1 percent considered Varuzhan Avetisyan,
3.3 percent considered Artur Sargsyan,
13.0 percent chose the “other” option.

