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  • Azerbaijan: No Glory for Veterans

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    May 12 2004

    Azerbaijan: No Glory for Veterans

    Former combatants struggle to survive, and veteran status offers
    little solace or practical help.

    By Mamed Suleimanov in Zakatala and Baku (CRS No. 233, 12-May-04)

    Rahim volunteered to go to the front in the war against the Armenians
    in 1992, when he was 23. In January 1993, he was wounded and taken
    prisoner near the town of Fizuli.

    Eleven years on, Rahim is reluctant to talk about his time as a
    prisoner-of-war. "I've told this story so many times to the state
    commission on prisoners, so go and talk to them," he told IWPR.

    But over a cup of tea, he relented and agreed to tell his story.

    "I spent more than a year in captivity. For about a month they kept me
    behind bars next to another Azeri man called Oktay. Then I ended up in
    the family of an Armenian man whose son had also been taken prisoner. I
    spent many long months in the countryside around Hadrut, in this
    man's house. His name was Kamo. They treated me much better there."

    After more than a year in captivity, Rahim's family managed to win
    his freedom after paying a ransom. He was exchanged for a body of an
    Armenian plus some money. He declined to say how much money changed
    hands, but said that it was the intermediary who kept it anyway -
    a field commander nicknamed Fantomas, a former tractor driver who
    spent the war involved more in the "business" of trading prisoners
    than in the actual fighting.

    Rahim returned an invalid to the small town of Zakatala in
    north-western Azerbaijan where he lives. Even though he cannot move
    the fingers on his left hand because of war wounds, he managed to
    become a professional hairdresser.

    The local authorities gave him a small room in a local hotel, which
    he turned into a hairdressing salon. Then his luck turned sour again.
    Survivors of a fire in an apartment block were re-housed in the hotel,
    so Rahim lost his means of making a livelihood.

    Now Rahim is unemployed. He has a family and three children, but
    no house and nowhere to turn to for help. The town authorities have
    long forgotten about him, and now he is saving up to move to Russia,
    where he hopes he can find a job as a market trader.

    Another veteran, 38-year-old Azer, had more luck. He too volunteered
    for the war, serving as a driver ferrying ammunition to the front. He
    was badly wounded by a landmine in Aghdam, and spent over a month in
    intensive care. Twelve years later, he still gets bad headaches from
    the skull injury he suffered.

    After he left hospital, Azer managed to get a fairly lucrative job by
    local standards, working at a customs checkpoint on the border with
    Georgia. He says that to avoid standing out from his colleagues, he
    took bribes and shared them with his superiors, just like the other
    customs officers.

    After ten years on the job, he managed to save up a decent sum, got
    married, bought a house in Baku and started his own business. But a
    year ago he was sacked from customs because, he says, "they sold my
    workplace to someone else".

    The stories of both Rahim and Azer illustrate how Azerbaijan's veterans
    of the Nagorny Karabakh war have had to fend for themselves in the 10
    years since the ceasefire agreement of 1994. Most say they are ignored
    by the state they fought for, and that they survive only on their wits.

    Recently a local television channel reported that a war invalid from
    the town of Imishli has been living with his wife and children in an
    old bus for three years, because he lost hope that he would ever be
    able to get a proper home.

    The primary concern for most veterans is feeding their families. The
    pension for invalids from the war is about 27 dollars a month, well
    below the bread line.

    Veterans used to enjoy some benefits, travelling free on public
    transport and receiving gas and electricity supplies for nothing.
    However, former Azerbaijani president Heidar Aliev cut those benefits
    from the beginning of 2002.

    Rei Kerimoglu, a spokesman for the Karabakh Gazileri (Karabakh
    Warriors) organisation, one of several veterans' groups, told IWPR that
    benefits for invalids are sometimes misappropriated. For instance,
    specially-adapted vehicles should be provided to invalids free of
    charge, but officials demand a bribe of 300 to 400 dollars to hand
    them over.

    Kerimoglu said that in recent years, abject poverty has driven 36
    war invalids to kill themselves, and 75 more have been treated by
    doctors after attempting suicide.

    Mekhti Mekhtiev, chairman of the Public Union of Karabakh War
    Invalids, Veterans and Families of Martyrs' Families, told IWPR, "We
    have been facing a difficult situation since our benefits were cut.
    When Baku mayor Hajibala Abutalibov had illegally-built structures
    demolished, some trading booths belonging to Karabakh veterans also
    got destroyed. These people are unable to work due to their health,
    and trading is their only source of income. Now many veterans are
    simply starving."

    Labour and welfare minister Nagiev denies that veterans are being
    neglected. He said the 8,000 Karabakh war invalids on his ministry's
    books get priority treatment from the state. "Compared with others,
    they have much higher pensions, they receive free medical treatment
    at home, and those who need to have treatment abroad are given a
    certain amount of money every year," he said. The minister said the
    state has handed out nearly 800 cars and 350 apartments to veterans
    free of charge since 1997.

    Altay Mamedov, who heads the Azerbaijani Association for Veterans of
    the Great Patriotic War, an organisation originally set up to help
    Second World War participants, said part of the problem is that there
    are so many different veterans' groups.

    "In other countries there is one centralised body that deals with all
    the problems facing veterans. But we have nine state organisations
    doing it, and as a result there are differing interpretations of the
    criteria for granting veteran status, and varying numbers of veterans
    are cited," said Mamedov. "The state claims there are 74,000 veterans
    of the Karabakh war in the country. But our data indicates that the
    number of war veterans is exaggerated. Our association is proposing to
    unite all organisations that [have the power to] grant veteran status."

    Neither Rahim nor Azer is a member of any of the veterans'
    organisations.

    "It's all politics, and the heads of all those organisations just
    want to grab a piece of the pie," said Rahim. Azer agreed, saying,
    "If you hang around waiting for help from the state, you could easily
    starve to death."

    Neither man likes reminiscing about the war, and they do not take
    part in army reunions. The memories of what they did then are a burden
    they carry alone.

    Mamed Suleimanov is a reporter for the Baku newspaper Novoe Vremya.
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