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Azeri Witchhunt Over Eurovision Votes

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  • Azeri Witchhunt Over Eurovision Votes

    AZERI WITCHHUNT OVER EUROVISION VOTES
    By Shaun Walker in Moscow

    The Independent
    Wednesday, 19 August 2009

    Security forces in Azerbaijan have launched a campaign against dozens
    of citizens for voting for the wrong entry in this year's Eurovision
    Song Contest. Authorities in the oil-rich country are apparently
    tracking down people who voted for Azerbaijan's bitter enemy Armenia
    in the competition held in May.

    The two countries fought a vicious war in the 1990s over the region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, which is now under the control of ethnic Armenians
    but is claimed by Azerbaijan. All borders between the two countries
    remain closed and tensions remain high, even over such a seemingly
    insignificant event as Eurovision.

    Rovshan Nasirli, a resident of Azerbaijan's capital Baku, was one
    of 43 people in the country to vote for Armenia's entry "Jan-Jan",
    sung by the duo Inga and Anush. He told Radio Liberty that he had
    been summoned to the country's national security ministry last week
    to explain himself.

    "They wanted an explanation for why I voted for Armenia. They said
    it was a matter of national security," said Mr Nasirli, who voted by
    text message. "They were trying to put psychological pressure on me,
    saying things like, 'You have no sense of ethnic pride. How come you
    voted for Armenia?' They made me write out an explanation, and then
    they let me go."

    This year's contest, which was held in Moscow and won by Norway, was
    already the most politicised in the history of Eurovision. Georgia,
    which fought a war with Russia last summer, refused to take part in
    the contest after it was told to change the lyrics of its entry. The
    song, entitled "Don't Want to Put in", was widely seen as a pun on
    the surname of Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and thus broke
    contest rules that songs cannot be political.

    Luckily for Mr Nasirli, he had a cast-iron excuse for voting for Inga
    and Anush. He didn't like the Azerbaijani entry, which featured an
    Iranian singer based in Sweden, and voted for Armenia because the
    song actually sounded "more Azeri".
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