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Azerbaijani Officer Jailed In Hungary For Brutal Killing Of Armenian

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  • Azerbaijani Officer Jailed In Hungary For Brutal Killing Of Armenian

    AZERBAIJANI OFFICER JAILED IN HUNGARY FOR BRUTAL KILLING OF ARMENIAN

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 13, 2006 Thursday 4:08 PM GMT

    An Azerbaijani military officer who hacked to death an Armenian
    lieutenant while attending a NATO-sponsored training course in Budapest
    was convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.

    Judge Andras Vaskuti of the Budapest district court ruled that Ramil
    Safarov, now 29 and an Azerbaijani army lieutenant, killed Armenian
    Lieutenant Gurgen Markarian, 26, in a "premeditated, malicious and
    an unusually cruel" way by nearly decapitating him with axe while
    the victim was sleeping.

    Safarov was also found guilty of planning the murder of another
    Armenian, which he did not carry out.

    "The crime was convicted in a malicious way because (Safarov) murdered
    the victim solely because of his Armenian origin," Vaskuti said,
    as he detailed how Safarov had also stubbed out a lit cigarette on
    the victim's body after committing the crime.

    Safarov will be eligible for parole in 30 years, according to the
    ruling. Defence lawyers launched an appeal immediately after the
    verdict was read out.

    The brutal killing, which took place on February 19, 2004, inflamed
    simmering ethnic tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia, two former
    Soviet republics which are fighting over control of the disputed
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Armenia had attributed the murder to "anti-Armenian hysteria" fanned
    by the Baku government, while Azerbaijani officials countered that
    the killer was himself a refugee from the conflict with Armenia and
    that the victim had taunted him over the conflict.

    The two young officers had been studying on an English-language course
    in the Hungarian capital as part of the NATO alliance's Partnership
    for Peace programme, of which both Armenia and Azerbaijan are members.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a six-year war over Karabakh that claimed
    around 25,000 lives and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

    It ended in a tense ceasefire in 1994 with Armenian forces in control
    of most of the enclave and seven surrounding regions, but Karabakh's
    status remains unresolved and tensions are still at boiling point.

    Azeri authorities had said several of the defendant's relatives were
    killed and his family had to flee its home in the city of Jebrail when
    it was taken by Armenian forces. They now live in squalid conditions
    in a student dormitory in Azerbaijan's capital, Baku.

    Since the end of military hostilities over Nagorno-Karabakh, all ties
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan, neighbours in the volatile Caucasus
    region, have been severed. The border is now a heavily-militarised
    front line peppered with land mines.

    For almost a decade, Western powers have been leading fruitless
    efforts to tease out a peaceful solution to the Karabakh conflict,
    but summits including the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents have
    not led to progress.

    Most recently, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev said in March that
    talks over the disputed region, hosted by French President Jacques
    Chirac earlier this year, were at a "dead end" and signaled that the
    oil-rich state should prepare for war.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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