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Azerbaijan: Air Force Commander's Assassination May Have Been Inside

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  • Azerbaijan: Air Force Commander's Assassination May Have Been Inside

    AZERBAIJAN: AIR FORCE COMMANDER'S ASSASSINATION MAY HAVE BEEN INSIDE JOB -- BAKU PROSECUTOR
    Shahin Abbasov

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/ins ightb/articles/eav100509a.shtml
    10/05/09

    With their investigation ready to enter its eighth month,
    prosecutors in Baku are now pursuing the theory that Lt. Gen. Rail
    Rzayev, Azerbaijan's air force commander, was assassinated by his
    subordinates. Investigators remain mystified over the motive for the
    killing, however.

    Rzayev was shot and killed early in the morning of February 11
    while sitting in his car outside his apartment building in downtown
    Baku, a location scanned by multiple security cameras and 24-hour
    armed guards. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Law
    enforcement agencies investigating the death announced in May that
    they had developed a composite sketch of the suspected killer, but
    no arrests have been made. In May, President Ilham Aliyev appointed
    Maj. Gen. Altay Mehdiyev, a former army chief of staff for the exclave
    of Nakhchivan, Aliyev's home region, to fill Rzayev's command.

    In an interview with EurasiaNet, General Prosecutor Zakir Garalov
    stated that the investigation into Rzayev's death "continues and
    it is under the control of President Aliyev." He did not comment
    on the investigation's rate of progress. Prosecutors are currently
    investigating "several people," including Lt. Gen. Rzayev's assistant,
    Maj. Aydin Rafiyev, his aide-de-camp, Capt. Anar Gashimov, and
    a few other army officers in connection with the crime, Garalov
    revealed. The Azerbaijani air force operates under the auspices of
    the country's army.

    Shortly after Rzayev's murder, an unknown person entered the
    commander's office and stole "some items," Garalov said. He did not
    specify the items stolen. Both Rafiyev and Gashimov have been arrested
    in connection with the missing items.

    Garalov indicated that the possibility exists that the two could be
    held accountable for the murder itself. "[T]he investigation does not
    exclude that these people are also involved in the general's murder,"
    Garalov said. He added, however, that prosecutors are still searching
    to come up with a motive for the crime.

    "Foreign experts" are participating in the investigation, but Garalov
    did not state their nationality or institutional association.

    A source in the Military Prosecutor's office, speaking on condition of
    anonymity, told EurasiaNet that a few Defense Ministry officials are
    also under investigation, including a relative of Lt. Gen. Rzayev,
    Lt. Col. Fuad Agarzayev, who works with the Azerbaijani air force
    and anti-aircraft defense forces.

    Lt. Gen. Rzayev's widow, Mahira Rzayeva, declined to speak with
    EurasiaNet about the investigation, but said that she hopes that her
    husband's murderer will eventually be arrested.

    Some experts, however, doubt that will ever happen.

    One criminal law expert suggested that the suspected killer may not
    be Azerbaijani -- a situation that could complicate an arrest. The
    expert contended that the guilty party could be a contract killer
    with foreign citizenship. "He came to Baku, fulfilled the order
    [to kill Lt. Gen. Rzayev] and managed to leave Azerbaijan the same
    day or shortly after that," the expert speculated. Investigators may
    have opted to wait for the individual to commit another crime before
    attempting to arrest him or her, the expert added.

    But if investigators have been unable to determine a motive after
    a seven-month probe, it seems unlikely that the passage of more time
    will help clarify matters, commented Eyyub Kerimov, a Baku-based lawyer
    and the editor-in-chief of Femida 007 (Justice 007), a newspaper that
    covers legal affairs. The lack of a presumed motive and arrested
    suspect "show the lack of any real progress in the investigation,"
    Kerimov said.

    Editor's Note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance correspondent
    based in Baku. He is also a board member of the Open Society
    Institute-Azerbaijan.
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