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Azerbaijani police force refugees off road after protest over evicti

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  • Azerbaijani police force refugees off road after protest over evicti

    Azerbaijani police force refugees off road after protest over eviction plans
    By AIDA SULTANOVA

    The Associated Press
    06/02/05 12:19 EDT

    BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) - Azerbaijani police forced a crowd of angry
    refugees off a road they had blocked Thursday to protest efforts
    to evict them from the homes where they moved after being displaced
    by war.

    About 30 people, mostly women, blocked a road on the outskirts of the
    capital Baku to try to attract the attention of President Ilham Aliev,
    who they said often travels along the route.

    Police physically forced the protesters off the road after they
    refused to budge, and some said they were treated brutally. One woman
    was bleeding from her chest and said she had been kicked and dragged
    by police after fainting.

    The protesters said they are being evicted from houses they moved
    into after fleeing their homes over a decade ago during a war with
    Armenian forces over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, which drove about
    1 million people from their homes.

    Many Azerbaijanis displaced by the six-year war, which ended in a
    cease-fire in 1994 and left Nagorno-Karabakh and a chunk of surrounding
    territory in ethnic Armenian control, still live in temporary housing.

    Protester Mirvari Agayeva said several displaced families had moved
    into privately built homes they bought in 1993, along a railway line
    used to transport oil products. But she said a nearby oil refinery
    that claims to own the land has been trying to evict them for months.
    They recently received letters from its director ordering them out
    immediately, she said.

    "Let them give us apartments and we will move out," said Mirvari
    Orujeva, a 66-year-old woman who lives with three of her nine children
    and several of her 28 grandchildren in a cluster of small buildings
    totaling seven rooms.
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