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BAKU: Azeri, British Students Protest At Lop-Sided Karabakh Films

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  • BAKU: Azeri, British Students Protest At Lop-Sided Karabakh Films

    AZERI, BRITISH STUDENTS PROTEST AT LOP-SIDED KARABAKH FILMS

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    May 18 2006

    A series of films on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno
    Karabakh screened in a British educational institution have stirred
    a scandal.

    According to AssA-Irada, the tension escalated after an influential
    London-based university held an event on Tuesday dedicated to the
    causes underlying the long-standing dispute and ways of solving it.

    The attending Azeri, Armenian and European students were presented
    with six films featuring the Karabakh war.

    Half of the movies screened were acquired from Armenia and
    the other three were presented as films directed by Azerbaijani
    cinematographers. However, after the films were shown, it turned out
    that all of them served Armenian interests.

    The films authored by Armenians featured gruesome developments
    and showed Azeri soldiers allegedly committing atrocities against
    Armenians.

    The films shot by Azerbaijanis, on the contrary, portrayed humanism
    and tolerance of Azerbaijanis toward Armenians. It is astounding that
    these films did not feature the devastated Azeri towns and villages,
    destroyed historical monuments and mosques, as well as the vicious
    Khojaly massacre committed by Armenians, and just showed the occupied
    territories.

    The Armenian-authored presentations described the development of
    Karabakh and its forging ties with Europe.

    Azerbaijani students, joined by their British classmates, protested at
    the injustice. They further appealed to the university administration,
    saying the films were one-sided and served propaganda purposes.

    Nagorno Karabakh, which is internationally recognized as part of
    Azerbaijan, has both Azeri and ethnic Armenian population. It was
    occupied by Armenia in early 1990s, along with seven other Azerbaijani
    districts, after large-scale hostilities that killed up to 30,000
    people and forced over a million Azeris out of their homes.

    The ceasefire accord was signed in 1994, but peace talks have been
    fruitless so far and refugees remain stranded.
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