Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Historic graveyard is victim of war

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Historic graveyard is victim of war

    From: [email protected]
    Subject: Historic graveyard is victim of war

    Historic graveyard is victim of war


    The Times
    April 21, 2006

    By Jeremy Page in Moscow

    Azerbaijan is being blamed for the destruction of a unique cemetery.

    A MEDIEVAL cemetery regarded as one of the wonders of the Caucasus has
    been erased from the Earth in an act of cultural vandalism likened to
    the Taleban blowing up the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan in 2001.

    The Jugha cemetery was a unique collection of several thousand carved
    stone crosses on Azerbaijan's southern border with Iran. But after 18
    years of conflict between Azerbaijan and its western neighbour,
    Armenia, it has been confirmed that the cemetery has vanished.

    The Institute for War and Peace Reporting, a London-based
    non-governmental organisation that supports independent journalism,
    said that one of its staff had recently been to the highly restricted
    site.

    Where once stood between 2,700 and 10,000 intricately carved
    headstones ' khachkars ' dating from the 9th to the 16th centuries,
    there was only a dry patch of earth, said the institute
    (www.iwpr.net). It was the first independent confirmation of what
    Armenia has long alleged ' that Azerbaijani authorities have razed the
    cemetery since the two former Soviet republics began a bloody border
    war in 1988.

    The war ended in a ceasefire in 1994, with 30,000 dead and a million
    displaced, but still simmers over the disputed region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, which is held by Armenia but internationally
    recognised as Azerbaijan. Foreign organisations had been unable to
    visit the cemetery because it is in Nakhichevan, a tiny enclave of
    Azerbaijan cut off by Armenia and Iran and accessible only by air.

    Azerbaijan has repeatedly dismissed Armenia's allegations as
    scaremongering and in turn accused Armenia of destroying hundreds of
    Muslim sites. President Aliyev of Azerbaijan angrily dismissed reports
    about the cemetery's destruction as `a lie and a provocation' last
    week.

    The institute's revelation now threatens to embarrass him and further
    cloud the prospects for a lasting peace with Armenia.

    Vartan Oskanian, the Armenian Foreign Minister, welcomed the
    report. `The irony is that this destruction has taken place not during
    a time of war but at a time of peace,' he told The Times. There has
    been clear intent by the Azerbaijanis to eliminate all evidence of
    Armenian presence on those lands. To do that, unspeakable,
    irreversible destruction has been wrought and 10,000 tombstones which
    hold immense religious and artistic significance are simply gone.'

    Tahir Tagizade, a spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, said
    that there had never been an Armenian cemetery or any other Armenian
    cultural relics in the area visited by the institute. `As a multi-
    ethnic society, we are proud of our diverse cultural heritage,' he
    said. `I don't see any reason for destroying Armenian property, even
    though we are at war with the Armenians.'

    The report comes as a European Parliament delegation is visiting both
    countries to look into allegations of attacks on cultural sites. It
    had hoped to visit the Jugha site, but has yet to be granted
    permission.Unesco said that it was also ready to send a fact-finding
    mission but needed permission from the Azeri and Armenian
    governments. The institute said that there was now a village of about
    500 people by the cemetery site. Some of those there said it had been
    destroyed much earlier, while others disputed that it was Armenian.

    The report quoted two witnesses as saying that the cemetery had been
    deliberately destroyed between 1989 and 2002. Argam Aivazian, the
    leading expert on Armenian monuments in Nakhichevan, said that Jugha
    had been the largest Armenian cemetery in existence, and a unique
    example of medieval art. `On the entire territory of Nakhichevan there
    existed 27,000 monasteries, churches, khachkars, tombstones and other
    Armenian monuments,' he said.

    They were mostly intact when he visited in 1987. `Today they have all
    been destroyed.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X