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Azeri official dismisses Armenian attacks on UN resolution

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  • Azeri official dismisses Armenian attacks on UN resolution

    Interfax News Agency, Russia
    March 15 2008


    Azeri official dismisses Armenian attacks on UN resolution

    BAKU


    An aide to Azerbaijan's president has dismissed Armenian attacks on
    an Azeri-introduced UN General Assembly resolution of March 14, that
    demands immediate withdrawal of Armenian forces from Azeri
    territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The statements of the Armenian officials are no more than propaganda
    efforts to play down this resolution and divert the attention of the
    Armenian public from the domestic political crisis. Any of the
    attempts at comparative quantitative analysis cannot stand up to any
    criticism, not even from the point of view of Armenian propaganda
    itself. It would be enough to mention the recent widely advertised
    celebrations of the 20th anniversary of the recognition by the
    European Parliament of the so-called anti-Armenian genocide of 1915,"
    Fuad Akhundov, head of a section in the presidential executive
    service, told Interfax on Saturday.

    Akhundov was referring to massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire in 1915.

    "I have in mind not the essence of the matter but the comparative
    analysis of numerical indicators that Armenia is making in an attempt
    to play down the resolution of the UN General Assembly," Akhundov
    said.

    The European Parliament's 1987 document declaring the 1915 massacres
    an act of anti-Armenian genocide received the support of only 60 of
    the legislature's 500 members. Those who voted in favor represented
    France and Greece alone.

    The other 10 countries that took part in the poll voted against the
    document, and that meant just 10 fewer votes, Akhundov said.

    The majority of European Parliament members abstained.

    Friday's UN resolution was backed by 37 votes, with only seven states
    voting against, Akhundov pointed out.

    "It is also worth noting that in the European Parliament the genocide
    motion received the support of deputies who did not have to express
    the official position of their countries, whereas voting in the
    General Assembly reflects the point of view not of deputies but of
    states. So, if from the point of view of Armenian propaganda the
    recognition of the genocide of Armenians by the European Parliament
    is an important event on the European scale, yesterday's vote of the
    General Assembly is much more important on the global scale. So it is
    not worth trying to delude the public in their own country once
    again," Akhundov said.
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