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The "Black January" of 1990

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  • The "Black January" of 1990

    THE "BLACK JANUARY" OF 1990

    Pogroms of Armenian Population in Multinational Baku

    Azg/arm
    19 Jan 05

    These days 15 years ago, on January 13-19 of 1990, when Azerbaijan was
    still soviet, the People's Front nationalistic party instigated
    pogroms of Armenians in multinational Baku. The Armenian population
    numbering 200 thousand was massacred, persecuted and send out of the
    country by the admission of Mikhail Garbachov and the soviet army.

    But this fact was no obstacle to give Garbachov a Nobel Prize for
    Peace few months later. Few years later the first and the last
    president of the USSR confessed that the fact that he declared
    emergency and sent troops to Baku was the most serious mistake in his
    political biography. This was, in fact, an apology to Azeris who had
    taken few tolls on January 19-20 in Baku. But Garbachov never repented
    for the death of dozens of Armenians killed by the Azeri throng on
    January 13-19. Instead, he hailed the pogroms of Sumgait as
    hooliganism.

    Tom de Waal, British journalist and eyewitness of the events, wrote in
    his "The Black Garden" that the Armenian borough of Baku and Sumgait
    turned into a slaughterhouse. Armenians were thrown down from their
    flats of many-storied buildings; the throng was beating Armenians to
    death. Thousands of Armenians found refuge at the police stations or
    the "Shafag" cinema; thousands of terrorized and tortured Armenians
    reached Krasnovodsk harbor of Turkmenistan. Some of them died aboard
    ships on the Caspian Sea or at Yerevan hospitals.

    Rufat Ahmedov, an Azeri journalist wrote: "There is no doubt that the
    Armenians underwent massacres. Few dozens out of the 200 thousand
    Armeniansof Baku were killed, others fled. Many of them hid at the
    Azeris' homes. All in all, the soviet inner forces billeted on Baku
    and numbering more than 11 thousand were able to prevent the pogroms".

    Undoubtedly, the pogroms were carried out by a direct order from Azeri
    authorities. Let's turn to the chronicle. Neymed Panahov and Rahim
    Ghaziev from the People's Front stated in a televised appearance on
    January 12 that Baku is full of homeless refugees whereas there are
    still thousands of Armenians inthe town. Abdurahman Vezirov, leader of
    Azerbaijan appealed to the nation to take active measures against the
    Armenians. "We hold he Center (Moscow) in our hands", he said.

    According to Zardusht Alizade, a famous Azeri political analyst, the
    posters on the People's Front office were indicating to the homes of
    Armenians. According to Arif Yunusov, an independent analyst, the
    death toll of Armenians was 86.

    Interestingly, Yevgeny Primakov and Dmitri Yazov were in Baku when the
    pogroms were carrying out. Only on January 19, when the massacres
    stopped as there was no Armenian left, the soviet inner forces took to
    task of settling the Azeris down. At least 130 Azeris died and
    hundreds got wounded. There were innocent victims as well. The soviet
    forces took a toll of 21 dead during the two-day "operation".

    Heydar Aliyev held a press conference at the Azeri diplomatic
    representatives on January 20 of 1990 and condemned the "Azeri" part
    of Baku pogroms. The "black January" of 1990 was the start of Aliyev's
    new political activity. Ayaz Mutalibov changed Vezirov as the head of
    the country on January the 20th.

    By Tatoul Hakobian

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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