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January 13 marks 18th anniversary of the Armenian pogroms in Baku

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  • January 13 marks 18th anniversary of the Armenian pogroms in Baku

    January 13 marks 18th anniversary of the beginning of Armenian pogroms
    in Baku


    2008-01-13 17:53:00


    ArmInfo. January 13 marks the 18th anniversary of the mass pogroms of
    Armenians in Azerbaijan's capital.

    On January 13, 1990, after the People's Front of Azerbaijan (PFA)
    finished its regular rally in Baku, several thousands of pogromists
    started attacking the apartments of Armenian residents in Baku, whose
    addresses had already been hung on the walls of PFA headquarters.

    "Yesterday mass disorders began in the city, there are a lot of victims
    and wounded people. We have got together to prevent further
    developments", First Secretary of the Central Committee (CC) of the
    Azerbaijani Communist Party (ACP) Abdurahman Vezirov said at the Jan 14
    emergency meeting of the ACP CC Bureau. Soviet generals who came from
    Moscow the same day, started the deployment of additional 10 thsd
    contingent of internal troops.

    However, the situation had entirely been out of control by that moment.
    As the central press reported several days later, the capital of Soviet
    Azerbaijan practically passed to the complete control of "the extremist
    forces of the People's Front". The military units dislocated in the
    city were blocked near the Salyan billets.

    Ethnic ground violent murders took place in Baku. To note, Sumgait
    experienced similar mass murders two years earlier. Dozens of thousands
    of native Armenians in Baku were driven out of their own apartments,
    and hundreds of them were beaten. According to official data, 91 people
    were killed during the Armenian pogroms in Baku. The victims were
    "chiefly Armenians", as the joint statement of the Azeri leaders
    Vezirov, Kafarova and Mutalibov published in the "Bakinskiy Rabochiy"
    newspaper said.

    It was possible to establish order in Baku only after the belated
    decree of the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Council dated January 19,
    when Soviet army troops entered the city in the face of resistance of
    the PFA fighters who had managed to partially armed themselves. In the
    long run, over 200 thsd Armenian residents, who lost their whole
    property, were expelled from Baku. Most of them still live in bad
    social conditions in Armenia, Russia and other countries.
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