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Hungarian Court To Issue Verdict April 13 On Azerbaijani Charged Wit

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  • Hungarian Court To Issue Verdict April 13 On Azerbaijani Charged Wit

    HUNGARIAN COURT TO ISSUE VERDICT APRIL 13 ON AZERBAIJANI CHARGED WITH KILLING ARMENIAN
    Palma Benczenleitner

    AP Worldstream
    Apr 04, 2006

    A verdict will be issued April 13 in the case of an Azerbaijani officer
    accused of murdering an Armenian classmate at a NATO training course
    in Hungary, a court said Tuesday.

    Lt. Ramil Safarov of Azerbaijan has confessed to using an ax in
    February 2004 to hack Lt. Gurgen Markarian of Armenia to death,
    authorities said, in a dormitory that was being used by participants
    of a NATO Partnership for Peace English language course in Budapest.

    At the time, police said the murder was committed with "unusual
    cruelty" and that Safarov had tried, unsuccessfully, to enter the
    room of another Armenian with the intention of killing him.

    Police said that Safarov confessed to the killing, claiming that the
    long-standing conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia was at the root
    of his act.

    The two neighboring, former Soviet republics remain at odds over
    the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave within
    Azerbaijan.

    At Tuesday's hearing, prosecutors asked that Safarov be sentenced to
    life in prison, with a 30-year minimum before any parole hearings.

    The Budapest City Court rejected a defense request for a new expert
    opinion to determine Safarov's mental health. Four earlier examinations
    already declared him mentally stable and accountable for his actions.

    "(Safarov's) actions were not guided by hatred, but by the trauma
    which remains," said his lawyer Gyorgy Magyar, referring to the feud
    between the two countries.

    The court said Safarov would make his final statement on April 13,
    the day of his sentencing.

    Armenian-backed forces drove Azerbaijan's army out of the ethnic
    Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s.

    A 1994 cease-fire ended the six-year war that killed 30,000 people
    and left about 1 million homeless and the enclave is now under the
    control of ethnic Armenians.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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