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BAKU: Azeri Official Downbeat On US State Department Rights Report

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  • BAKU: Azeri Official Downbeat On US State Department Rights Report

    AZERI OFFICIAL DOWNBEAT ON US STATE DEPARTMENT RIGHTS REPORT

    Ekho
    March 13 2008
    Azerbaijan

    A senior Azerbaijani spokesman has voiced his disagreement with various
    aspects of the latest US State Department report on the human rights
    situation in Azerbaijan in 2007.

    "As a whole, the most recent State Department report on human rights
    in Azerbaijan mentions issues where the situation is not quite the
    same as the authors of the document are making out," the Azerbaijani
    Foreign Ministry spokesman, Xazar Ibrahim, told the Ekho newspaper
    in remarks the paper published on 13 March.

    Ibrahim said that the USA and Azerbaijan are strategic partners and
    friendly countries. However, he added that the "other side does
    not have full information on some points and the objective view
    is lacking".

    The spokesman said that certain issues reflected in the report had
    been discussed by the US and Azerbaijani governments at various levels.

    "We are drawing relevant conclusions and taking necessary steps,"
    Ibrahim said.

    Commenting on the wording which the State Department used in its
    most recent report to describe the situation around the Nagornyy
    Karabakh conflict, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman
    said: "We expect that the USA, which speaks of the occupation of
    Azerbaijani territories, will play a more effective role in ending
    this occupation."

    In an interview with the paper, political analyst Rasim Musabayov
    gave a positive assessment of the department's wording regarding
    Nagornyy Karabakh.

    "It would be OK if the State Department pointed out that it is
    specifically Armenia, under the cover of ethnic separatists from
    Nagornyy Karabakh, that has occupied Azerbaijani territories,"
    Musabayov said. He added that such wording would be more precise.

    The analyst said that the USA has always sought some balance to
    neutralize the reaction of the Armenian lobby in the USA and Armenia.

    Ekho also recalled that, in last year's State Department report
    on human rights around the world in 2006, the report on Azerbaijan
    and Armenia noted: Armenia has occupied the Azerbaijani territory
    of Nagornyy-Karabakh and seven adjacent Azerbaijani districts. At
    the time, this wording caused great displeasure among the Armenian
    lobby in the US, which initially managed to secure a change to this
    phrase in the report on Armenia. However, some time later, after a
    demarche from the authorities in Baku, the State Department restored
    the original wording to the document. On this occasion, in its report
    for 2007, the State Department notes that ethnic separatists supported
    by Armenia have occupied the Azerbaijani territory of Nagornyy Karabakh
    and seven adjacent Azerbaijani districts.

    On the same day, opposition Yeni Musavat newspaper quoted the
    director of the Turan news agency, Mehman Aliyev, as saying that the
    "US government's position on the issues mentioned in the report from
    the US State Department is not successful". He thinks that the US
    government's position on Azerbaijan has not changed.

    "These positions recur every year... But the point is what we get
    out of this unchanging position."

    Aliyev thinks that this position is not principled enough.

    "There are no serious and real steps behind these statements... I do
    not think that this report, this position, will lead to some serious
    changes," Aliyev said.

    The head of the opposition Musavat Party, Isa Qambar, said that "it is
    necessary to switch from noting the truths to changing the situation".

    Human rights activist Saida Qocamanli added that the report reflected
    Azerbaijani realities.

    "Undoubtedly, it is worth thinking about this report. It is worth
    because we continue to punish journalists in 2008. The mistakes of
    2007 continue this year as well," Qocamanli added.

    An MP from the ruling New Azerbaijan Party, Aydin Mirzazada, said
    that there were "fairly positive points in the report".

    "I positively assess the fact that the State Department noted reforms
    in Azerbaijan and their results. There are critical materials at
    some points. This stems from a lack of information or not getting
    into the detail of the issue," Mirzazada said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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