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"Massacres In Baku And Sumgayit Are Buried In Oblivion"

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  • "Massacres In Baku And Sumgayit Are Buried In Oblivion"

    "MASSACRES IN BAKU AND SUMGAYIT ARE BURIED IN OBLIVION"
    By Arevik Badalian

    AZG Armenian Daily
    14/01/2009

    Armenian Genocide

    19 years passed after the slaughters in Baku

    Asya Poghosian and her family recall January 13 of 1990 as a "black
    day". The Armenian massacres in Baku started that day and continued
    until January 15. During those three days dozens of Armenians were
    killed, thousands of them became homeless and fled to Armenia and
    Russia.

    Asya Poghosian is a 75-year-old woman. It is already 19 years that
    she lives in Yerevan having a refugee status.

    Politician Alexander Manasian mentions that the massacres in Baku
    and Sumgayit is the continuation of Turkish policy on the Armenian
    Genocide.

    "Our demands for recognition of the Armenian Genocide are restricted
    in recognition of the genocide in 1915. The aim of Turkey was not
    its national security but annihilation of the Armenian nation. That
    is why the massacres continued even after the World War and embraced
    territories beyond the borders of Turkey. In 1918, Turkish regular
    troops massacred thousands of Armenians on their way to Baku",
    Alexander Manasian said at "Urbat" club.

    President of the Assembly of the Azerbaijani Armenians Gregori Ayvazian
    is confident that taking into account the fact of the massacres in Baku
    it is impossible to see Nagorno Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan. "The
    Azerbaijani Armenians were forced to leave their cradle. 418 thousand
    Armenians of Azerbaijan became refugees; 300 thousand of them live in
    Armenia today. The Armenian authorities don't use this fact, while the
    Azerbaijanis don't miss the opportunity to speak of their refugees",
    he said. The Assembly of the Azerbaijani-Armenians applied to the
    Museum-Institute of the Armenian Genocide to define the massacres
    of Baku scientifically. "The Museum-Institute didn't delay the
    answer. According to the conclusion of the Museum-Institute, the
    massacres of Baku correspond to the international resolution on the
    genocide phenomenon", Gregori Ayvazian added.

    Asya Poghosian recalls that the Azerbaijanis, who committed the
    massacres, clearly knew the houses of the Armenians.

    A state of emergency was declared in Baku only in January 19. The same
    day the Soviet troops broke into the capital of Azerbaijan. Tatul
    Hakobian, the author of the book "Green and black; Artsakh diary",
    writes that the Communist authorities of Armenia touched upon
    the Armenian massacres of Baku a month late on February 13. The
    Supreme Council considered inexplicable "the fact that in spite of
    the massacres committed against the Armenian population, the troops
    entered Baku unforgivably late, when there were already no Armenians
    because of the ferocity of the extremists". The resolution condemned
    "the massacres of Armenians in Baku and other provinces of the Soviet
    Azerbaijan", qualifying them as "continuation of the genocide of the
    Armenian people".

    "The massacres of Baku are not assessed and qualified appropriately by
    now. Moreover, massacres in Baku and Sumgayit are buried in oblivion",
    the politician underlined.
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