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BAKU: Anti-Armenian rhetorical "competition" continues in Baku

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  • BAKU: Anti-Armenian rhetorical "competition" continues in Baku

    Zerkalo, Azerbaijan
    Aug 10 2004

    ANTI-ARMENIAN RHETORICAL `COMPETITION` CONTINUES IN BAKU


    BAKU, 10.08.04. Azeri officials continue their barrage of threats,
    demands and complaints directed at Armenia and NKR. Just in the last
    week, spokesman for the Azeri Defense Ministry Ramiz Melikov promised
    to do away with the Armenian state in `25 to 30 years` and
    incorporate its territory into Azerbaijan. `This people has been a
    nuisance for its neighbors and has no right to live in this region,`
    Melikov said.

    The Defense Ministry spokesman predicted that the `world Armenian
    cabal` would face certain ruin. Not just yet, however, as the senior
    official in the ruling New Azerbaijan Party Ali Ahmedov dismissed the
    human rights criticism of the New York-based Human Rights Watch,
    alleging that it was under Armenian influence.

    Also last week, the Azeri government, which continually threatens to
    unleash a new war in Karabakh, protested the holding of annual
    maneuvers of the Karabakh Army. The Azeri Central Election
    Commission, widely chastised for rubber-stamping the dynastic power
    transfer in Azerbaijan last year, protested the holding of a
    competitive municipal election in Karabakh. The state-controlled and
    scandal-plagued Football Federation of Azerbaijan, in its turn
    complained about the plans for holding a soccer competition in
    Karabakh.

    With aggressive rhetoric continuing unabated, a public opinion poll
    conducted in 2003 and published last month found strong public
    support for peace in both Azerbaijan and Armenia. 97 percent of
    Armenians and 93 percent of Azeris surveyed said they desired peace,
    while 74 percent of Armenians and 46 percent of Azeris want
    inter-ethnic relations re-established. Significantly, there is
    greater support for reconciliation among the Azeris displaced by the
    war (80 percent) than the general population. The American University
    in Washington, DC funded the study.
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