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BAKU: Azeris in Austria appeal to UNESCO

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  • BAKU: Azeris in Austria appeal to UNESCO

    Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
    March 29 2005

    Azeris in Austria appeal to UNESCO

    Baku, March 28, AssA-Irada

    The Azerbaijani communities in Austria have adopted an appeal to
    UNESCO over Armenians' attempts to conduct geological excavations in
    Shusha, an ancient Azerbaijani city currently occupied by Armenia.
    The document indicates that the attempts at finding `the trace of
    Armenians' around the town of Shusha are groundless, the State
    Committee on Azerbaijanis Living in Foreign Countries said.
    `The research conducted over many years did not discover any facts on
    Armenians' alleged affiliation to the Upper Garabagh indigenous
    population. On the contrary, it was indicated that Azerbaijanis are
    the indigenous population of these territories', the appeal said.
    The Azeri communities thereby called on international organizations,
    including UNESCO, to condemn Armenian researchers' attempts to
    distort history.
    `This contradicts numerous international conventions, including the
    1954 Hague Convention passed by UNESCO `for the Protection of
    Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict', the appeal said.
    Azerbaijanis living in Austria also forwarded an appeal to
    international organizations over March 31, Day of Azerbaijanis'
    Massacre, indicating the facts of carnage and deportation policy
    pursued by Armenians for many years.
    In March 1918, 50,000 Azerbaijanis were brutally killed in Baku,
    Shamakhi, Mughan, Guba, Nakhchivan and Lankaran, and 10,000 Azeris
    ousted from their native land. In Baku alone, the number of people
    killed by Armenian terrorists made up 30,000.
    58 villages were wiped out in Shamakhi, while 122 in Guba, 150 in the
    mountainous part of Garabagh, 115 in Zangazur, 211 in the Iravan
    province and 92 villages in the Gars province. 7,000 people were
    killed in Shamakhi alone, including 1,653 women and 965 children.*
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