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BAKU: Armenian women pleased with their life in Azerbaijan

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  • BAKU: Armenian women pleased with their life in Azerbaijan

    ANS TV, Baku, in Azeri
    28 Jul 04

    Armenian women pleased with their life in Azerbaijan



    [Presenter Natavan Babayeva] The arrest of members of the Karabakh
    Liberation Organization [who protested against Armenian officers'
    visit to Baku] and the fact that the Armenian officers had been
    invited to Baku [to attend a NATO conference] were wrong decisions by
    the Azerbaijani authorities. This is the opinion of Yevgeniya
    Shagenovna Abdullayeva who thanks the government for allowing her to
    live in Baku in conditions of freedom and normal ethnic relations.

    [Correspondent over video of Baku] More than 20,000 Armenians live in
    the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, today. We decided to knock on a number
    of doors which have always been open to Armenians in Azerbaijan -
    just to ask how they are doing. We failed to meet a woman called
    Rimma because she was at work. But we got in touch with an Armenian
    woman who introduced herself as Madina. She was guarded by her
    Azerbaijani husband and sons.

    [Madina] Why are you filming me? How can you do things like that
    without telling me?

    [Man in Russian] Don't film.

    [Correspondent] What are your relations with the government? Are they
    normal?

    [Madina speaking in Russian] Yes. I am not complaining. Thank God, I
    never complain. Everything depends on God. What can we do?

    [Correspondent] We knocked on an another door. Yevgeniya Shagenovna
    Abdullayeva met us with real Azerbaijani hospitality. She said that
    the Azerbaijani government does not discriminate against her. Her
    Armenian background has not restricted her movements or wishes.

    [Yevgeniya Abdullayeva] I can say that I am personally satisfied. If
    I had not obeyed, I would have never stayed here. I have brought up
    two children here over the entire period of the [Nagornyy Karabakh]
    conflict since 1988. My daughter was six in 1988 and another daughter
    was four. Since that time, I have brought them up, they have
    graduated from school and university, my daughter is married, I
    travel and talk freely. No, I have no problems.

    [Correspondent] Her only problem is that she is a housewife. Although
    she had worked as a language and literature teacher for 19 years, she
    had to quit her favourite job. Not because of the Azerbaijanis'
    attitude to her, but because she was ashamed of what the Armenians
    had done to the Azerbaijanis.

    [Yevgeniya Abdullayeva speaking in Azeri] When I quit my job, I was
    asked why are you doing this, nobody has ever reproached you, you
    have an Azerbaijani family and children. I said no, why shouldn't I?
    I thought afterwards that my decision was correct. Everything needs
    to be respected. Why should I wait?

    [Correspondent] The Armenian woman is pleased not only with the
    principal of the school, but also with the peace policy conducted by
    the state in which she lives. As for [Armenian President] Robert
    Kocharyan, she condemns him for his desire to unleash a war.

    [Yevgeniya Abdullayeva speaking in Azeri] Who is he? Maybe someone
    knows him, why should I? I do not know him and do not want to. Why
    should I? Only because I am Armenian? First, I am Armenian living
    here. I have not seen him, I do not meet him and I do not want to
    meet him. What kind of attitude should one have to a country that
    wants a war? Any country, not only Armenia. Would you have a good
    attitude to a country that wants to wage a war with you?

    [Correspondent] She says that the 25 years of her free life among the
    Azerbaijanis should serve as a warning to Armenia. But this Armenian
    woman also spoke about our officials' position on Karabakh.

    [Yevgeniya Abdullayeva speaking in Azeri] My attitude is that it is a
    difficult issue. There is a mother who has lost her three sons, God
    forbid. One must cope with this, right? It is difficult, they [the
    Azerbaijani authorities] probably should not have given permission
    and they [Armenian officers] probably should not have come here. One
    should take people's feelings into account. This is my personal
    opinion. Was there any need to touch a raw nerve? Those who suffer
    suffer in any case, right? But what can we do? The government should
    deal with this, right?

    [Correspondent] You see, even the Baku Armenians realize this.

    Zamina Aliyeva and Aytan Mammadova, ANS.
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