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Talysh issue, dormant in Azerbaijan, reopened in Armenia

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  • Talysh issue, dormant in Azerbaijan, reopened in Armenia

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    May 27 2005


    TALYSH ISSUE, DORMANT IN AZERBAIJAN, REOPENED IN ARMENIA

    By Vladimir Socor

    Friday, May 27, 2005


    On May 20-22, in Armenia's resort town of Tsaghkadzor, an event
    billed as the "First International Conference on Talysh Studies" was
    hosted by Yerevan State University's Iranian Studies Department and
    the Yerevan-based Center for Iranian Studies. Almost certainly, some
    political circles in Armenia were behind this initiative. The
    conference appeared designed at least in part to resurrect the issue
    of autonomy for the Talysh ethnic group in Azerbaijan.

    Such intentions draw inspiration from the would-be "Talysh-Mugan
    Republic," declared on June 21, 1993, in southeastern Azerbaijan by a
    group of ethnic Talysh officers under the leadership of Colonel
    Alikram Gumbatov. Their rebellion was correlated with a massive
    Armenian offensive on the Karabakh front and seizure of territories
    deep inside western Azerbaijan by Armenian forces. The Talysh rebels
    proclaimed the independence of a seven-district area in southeastern
    Azerbaijan, but did not elicit significant support among their own
    ethnic group. On August 24 that year, Azerbaijani-loyal troops put an
    end to the Talysh "republic" and arrested its leaders. Gumbatov,
    sentenced to imprisonment for treason, became a cause celebre as a
    "political prisoner" during the ensuing decade.

    A self-styled Talysh National Movement surfaced unexpectedly for the
    purposes of the conference just held in Armenia. TNM leader Fahraddin
    Abbos-Zoda and several members arrived from Azerbaijan to participate
    in the conference. Members of a Talysh diaspora group from Moscow
    also participated, alongside academic experts from Armenia and Iran.
    The latter country has its own Talysh minority, near the
    Iran-Azerbaijan border.

    Abbos-Zoda and others told the conference that the Talysh are
    "oppressed" in Azerbaijan and called for autonomy of the
    Talysh-inhabited area. The TNM asked the conference to appeal to the
    United Nations, the OSCE, and other international organizations "to
    help put an end to violations of the basic rights of Talysh in
    Azerbaijan." This seems to have been the initial goal of the
    conference organizers. However, the participants from Iran, where the
    Talysh are not recognized as an ethnic group, blocked that proposal.

    The conference in Armenia did resolve to found an International
    Talysh Association, elected the association's steering committee, and
    announced plans to hold follow-up conferences and publish reference
    material on the Talysh with a view to helping preserve their ethnic
    identity, language, and cultural heritage.

    A Moscow-based, obscure "Party for Equality of the Peoples of
    Azerbaijan," formerly known as the Talysh People's Party, has
    distanced itself from the conference in Armenia. The party described
    the Moscow Talysh who attended that conference as "nationalist
    adventurers." The party professes loyalty to a "multi-national
    Azerbaijan," seeks broader opportunities for Talysh self-expression,
    and has entered dialogue with the state authorities.

    The Talysh are a largely agricultural, Shia Muslim population,
    speaking dialects closely related to Farsi. They reside for the most
    part near Azerbaijan' border with Iran, around the towns of Lerik,
    Lenkoran, and Astara on the Caspian Sea. Azerbaijan's official
    statistics put the number of Talysh at approximately 80,000. Some
    Talysh estimate the size of their group at up to half a million in
    Azerbaijan (and a comparable number across the border in Iran). The
    attempt by unidentified circles in Armenia to reopen the dormant
    Talysh issue coincides with reports of significant progress in the
    negotiations with Azerbaijan over Karabakh, and may be designed to
    complicate the overall situation.
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