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Russia suspected of handing out merchandize: Azerbaijan demands expl

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  • Russia suspected of handing out merchandize: Azerbaijan demands expl

    WPS Agency, Russia
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    January 16, 2009 Friday



    RUSSIA SUSPECTED OF HANDING OUT MERCHANDIZE;
    Azerbaijan demands an explanation

    Vladimir Soloviov, Ivan Konovalov

    RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY IS ASKED TO EXPLAIN ARMS DELIVERIES TO
    ARMENIA; An update on the Russian-Azerbaijani scandal.

    Reporting gratis delivery of $800 million worth of merchandise to
    Armenia, Azerbaijan media outlets fomented a major scandal between
    Azerbaijan and Russia. Russian Ambassador to Azerbaijan was summoned
    to the Foreign Ministry in Baku for explanations. The Russian Defense
    Ministry called the reports false. The Russian Foreign Ministry
    declined comment pending the completion of a thorough investigation of
    all circumstances.

    ANS TV network was the first to break the sensational news. It quoted
    Alexander Petrunin of the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service as
    allegedly confirming weapons transfer under the terms of the
    appropriate Russian-Armenian agreement. Neither the assortment nor
    quantities of the weapons or the name of the document in question were
    specified. Baku hit the roof. Russian Ambassador in Baku, Vasily
    Istratov, was summoned to the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry. Day.az
    agency reported that the Russian diplomat met with Deputy Foreign
    Minister Araz Azimov who asked Istratov to confirm or deny the report.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry confirmed the fact of summons but
    declined further comment. Sources say investigation is under way. "All
    of that has to be checked and verified. Somebody could distort the
    picture, inadvertently or with malicious intent," a source said.

    The Russian Defense Ministry was more explicit. Colonel Alexander
    Drobyshevsky, acting chief of the Press Service, said response to the
    formal inquiry was being drawn at this point. "There is nothing so far
    to confirm that any merchandize changed hands," he said. "We evaluate
    reports like this as an information provocation." Drobyshevsky added
    that "... Petrunin is not authorized to offer any such comment in the
    first place."

    Armenia denied all innuendo too. "I do not know where they got this
    information," Armenian Defense Ministry Press Secretary Sejran
    Shakhsuvanjan said and called the report "disinformation." "Armenia is
    a member of the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization. It
    maintains military contacts with Russia. Still, I'm not aware of any
    such purchases," Shakhsuvanjan said.

    Source: Kommersant, January 14, 2009, p. 8

    Translated by Aleksei Ignatkin
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