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BAKU: One More Asylum-Seeking Armenian Appears in Baku

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  • BAKU: One More Asylum-Seeking Armenian Appears in Baku

    Baku Today, Azerbaijan
    July 24 2004

    One More Asylum-Seeking Armenian Appears in Baku

    Baku Today 24/07/2004 12:32

    One more ethnic-Armenian appeared in the capital of the arch foe
    neighbor, Azerbaijan, on Friday, seeking to find an asylum in a third
    country, ANS reported.

    Ispek Sumbatovich, 65, who was detained in Baku's main airport named
    after Heydar Aliyev, claimed that he fled from Armenia in order to
    get rid of the hard economic and political situation in his home
    country.

    Sumbatovich, who confessed that he had fought against Azerbaijan in
    1991-94 war, said he would inform the people of Azerbaijan about the
    hard conditions in Armenia.

    It was the second case of Armenians' fleeing to Baku to find refugee
    in a third country. Two Armenians, Roman Teryan and Artur Apresyan,
    surprisingly appeared in Baku's private ANS television early April of
    this year, also claiming that they had left Armenia because of what
    they called intolerable conditions in their country.

    The two still are kept in the prison of Azerbaijan's National
    Security Ministry. Local media has cited former National Security
    Minister Namiq Abbasov as saying that Teryan and Apresyan would be
    moved to a third country by late July.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia, two former Soviet republics in the southern
    Caucasus, are at a state of no war no peace since the latter occupied
    one-fifth of Azerbaijan's territories during the war.

    Azerbaijan's occupied territories include Nagorno-Karabakh, a western
    region that was home to nearly 100,000 ethnic-Armenians in late
    1980s, and also seven administrative districts around
    Nagorno-Karabakh; Lachin, Kelbejar, Aghdam, Fuzuli, Jebrail, Zengilan
    and Qubadli.

    Armenian troops continue occupying the Azerbaijani territories since
    a cease-fire agreement signed in 1994 despite four UN Security
    Council resolutions demanding immediate withdrawal from the
    administrative districts.
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