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ANKARA: Still Resentful Of Mistreatment, Bedikyan Dismisses Azeri Ex

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  • ANKARA: Still Resentful Of Mistreatment, Bedikyan Dismisses Azeri Ex

    STILL RESENTFUL OF MISTREATMENT, BEDIKYAN DISMISSES AZERI EXCUSES
    Fulya Ozerkan

    Turkish Daily News , Turkey
    Dec 28 2006

    Bedikyan, a successful pianist sharing the same stage with Turkey's
    leading jazz musicians and who also plays in Sertab Erener's band,
    says he is not planning to return to Baku for any concerts unless
    Azerbaijani authorities offer an official apology

    Well-known jazz pianist Burak Bedikyan says he was refused entry
    to Azerbaijan after being subjected to ill treatment at the airport
    because of his Armenian descent and denies Azerbaijani claims that
    he was to address thousands during a two-day performance last week
    together with Sertab Erener, Turkey's winner of the 2003 Eurovision
    song contest.

    "I went to Azerbaijan not to give an outdoor public concert attended
    by 10-15,000 people but to perform on two special nights at Baku's
    Gulistan Palace attended by only a VIP audience," Bedikyan told the
    Turkish Daily News in an interview.

    Turkey formally sought information both from the Azerbaijani Foreign
    Ministry and the Azerbaijani Embassy here with regard to Bedikyan's
    allegations. Ankara's move came after the young pianist filed verbal
    and written complaints with the Turkish Foreign Ministry. "It's
    really ridiculous that [Azerbaijani authorities] give the lack of
    a visa as a justification for their refusal to grant me entry, but
    everyone knows that a passport is sufficient for all citizens of the
    Turkish Republic to enter Azerbaijani territory," Bedikyan said.

    Azerbaijani Embassy officials here were not immediately available
    to comment on Bedikyan's charges, but news reports earlier said
    Azeri officials refused to issue a visa to the pianist, arguing that
    Bedikyan's name being announced during a concert attended by 10-15,000
    could have sparked an incident because Azerbaijan and Armenia were
    in a state of war.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia, both ex-Soviet republics, are at loggerheads
    over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Azeri territory occupied by Armenian
    troops. The region's final status remains unresolved, and years of
    talks under the auspices of international mediators have brought few
    visible results.

    Turkey has close ties with Azerbaijan, with which it shares an ethnic
    and linguistic heritage, but it severed diplomatic relations with
    Armenia due to Yerevan's unsettled dispute with Azerbaijan.

    Bedikyan, a Turkish citizen, accused Azerbaijani authorities at Baku
    Airport of mistreating him and refusing him entry upon arrival for
    a concert on Dec. 19. He was forced to return to Istanbul and could
    not join his band, insisting that he was singled out and mistreated
    despite his Turkish citizenship.

    "We were taken to the VIP section upon our arrival at Baku Airport
    and waited for passport checks. Erener was given priority in her
    entry procedure and then sent to her hotel. Azerbaijani authorities
    called me, demanded my identity card and then asked for my surname. I
    answered them but later they again asked my surname. I again told
    them my surname was Bedikyan, and they asked my nationality. I said
    I was a Turkish citizen as set out in my passport and identity card
    and that I was of Armenian descent. Later they talked to one another,
    and the only words I could make out from their conversation were
    'Christian and Armenian'," he said.

    "Almost 15 minutes later three Azerbaijani officials took me from the
    airport," continued Bedikyan, "and made me get on a bus and took me to
    another part of the airport. They did not answer my questions, though
    I asked calmly and respectfully, and they rebuked me when I continued
    to insistently seek an explanation. They even threatened me. I waited
    for almost three hours. I was not allowed to drink water or make
    a call. They approached me in a very unfriendly and hostile way. In
    fact, I was sent back to Istanbul before realizing what had happened."

    Bedikyan said he was refused entry without reason after being
    mistreated, just like an enemy, despite the efforts of production
    manager Serkan Guney, who was also threatened by Azerbaijani officials
    with being taken to the police station if he insisted on objecting.

    "It took me two to three days to get my luggage after arriving in
    Istanbul. I later informed the Foreign Ministry both verbally and in a
    written complaint, and thankfully the ministry took up the incident,"
    he added.

    Despite the absence of Bedikyan, Erener gave her concerts in Baku.

    The pianist says more could have been done and that Erener could have
    stood up for him, but he declined to elaborate further to avoid a
    battle of words.

    "I'm a jazz musician. I am not the only pianist in Erener's band.

    I'm accompanying Erener in her concerts together with another pianist,
    Tulug Tirpan; however, if I were the only pianist, the incident in
    Azerbaijan could have been more serious because it would not have
    been possible to perform the concert with only Erener and a guitar,"
    he said.

    Bedikyan, who shares the same stage with Turkey's leading jazz
    musicians, said he was not planning to travel to Azerbaijan again for
    a concert unless Azerbaijani authorities offered an official apology.

    "First of all, I certainly don't take the incident personally, but
    I see it as disrespect and a mistake against the Turkish Republic,
    of which I'm a citizen," he said.

    But Bedikyan said he harbored no hostility against Azerbaijan, adding
    that he could go again after everything was settled amicably.
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