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Ex-Azeri Leader Begged For Apartment

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  • Ex-Azeri Leader Begged For Apartment

    EX-AZERI LEADER BEGGED FOR APARTMENT
    By Anatoly Medetsky
    Staff Writer
    Aida Sultanova

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    June 9 2006

    The first president of independent Azerbaijan, Ayaz Mutalibov, had
    to beg the Kremlin for an apartment after he fled a rebellion in 1992.

    Mutalibov left Baku aboard a Russian military plane just three months
    into his term. He is wanted in Azerbaijan on charges of negligence
    for an Armenian attack in February 1992 that killed hundreds of
    Azeris. Baku also accuses him of involvement in a coup plot in 2001.

    Mutalibov, who dismissed the accusations as "political intrigue,"
    said by telephone that one of the first things he did upon arriving
    in Moscow was to ask the Kremlin for a home.

    The Presidential Property Department provided him with a state
    apartment in 1994, but he was not allowed to register there and had
    to apply for a new guest visa every 45 days, Mutalibov recalled. The
    government finally donated a four-room apartment to him and his family
    in 1997, in the remote district of Zhulebino, where he still lives.

    In 1999, then-President Boris Yeltsin granted him the status of
    political refugee, and only at the end of last year did he receive
    a refugee card allowing him to travel abroad, Mutalibov said.

    Despite the apartment problems, Mutalibov said he remained a friend
    of Russia. "We think that relations with Russia are a priority for
    Azerbaijan because we are neighbors that have long lived as a single
    country," he said. "We are linked by a lot of things -- for example,
    the fact that about 2 million of my countrymen live here."

    During Mutalibov's short term as president, Azerbaijan joined the
    Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose group that replaced the
    Soviet Union.

    Mutalibov said Russia had never tried to use him to influence
    Azeri politics and that he had not sought the Kremlin's support for
    his political ambitions. He heads the Social Democratic Party of
    Azerbaijan, which does not have any seats in the Azeri parliament.

    Still a citizen of Azerbaijan, Mutalibov said he hoped to return to
    his home country.

    "It is a disgrace that the first president of Azerbaijan has to live
    abroad," he said.
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