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Satellite Images Show Disappearance Of Armenian Artifacts In Azerbai

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  • Satellite Images Show Disappearance Of Armenian Artifacts In Azerbai

    SATELLITE IMAGES SHOW DISAPPEARANCE OF ARMENIAN ARTIFACTS IN AZERBAIJAN

    Targeted News Service
    December 8, 2010 Wednesday 2:16 AM EST
    WASHINGTON

    The American Association for the Advancement of Science issued the
    following news release:

    A high-resolution satellite image of a medieval Armenian cemetery
    in Azerbaijan taken in September 2003 shows hundreds of khachkars,
    intricate 15th and 16th century burial monuments. In a satellite
    image from May 2009, however, the khachkars are missing, suggesting
    that they were either destroyed or removed.

    A comparison of the images by analysts from the AAAS Geospatial
    Technologies and Human Rights Project found evidence of significant
    destruction and changes in the grade of the cemetery's terrain. The
    image from September 2003 shows rocky and uneven terrain, as well as
    shadows cast by the khachkars, while the May 2009 image shows a much
    flatter landscape and the khachkars' absence.

    "As can be seen in the 2009 image, the appearance of additional dirt
    roads that traverse the cemetery and visibly smoother terrain suggest
    that the khachkars may have been destroyed or removed by earthmoving
    equipment," said Susan Wolfinbarger, senior program associate for the
    AAAS Geospatial Technologies and Human Rights Project. "Our analysis
    of the satellite evidence is consistent with that of observers on the
    ground who have attested to the destruction of the khachkars and the
    leveling of the terrain in the Djulfa cemetery."

    The geospatial team, part of the AAAS Science and Human Rights Program,
    determined the exact location of the cemetery using a map hand-drawn
    by those with local knowledge of the area. It is located in Djulfa,
    part of Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave near the Iranian border.

    Following reports that sledgehammer-wielding Azerbaijani soldiers
    destroyed hundreds of khachkars, a delegation of European Parliament
    members were rebuffed when they sought access to the cemetery in May
    2006 to conduct a fact-finding mission. The International Council on
    Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) also observed the phased destruction of
    the khachkars in Djulfa in reports published in 2003 and 2006-2007.

    "Geospatial images allow us to shed light on regions that are not
    accessible, providing a visualization tool for events or circumstances
    that are important to bring to the public's attention but which,
    without some visual evidence, are less likely to attract attention
    and interest," said Jessica Wyndham, senior project director of the
    AAAS Science and Human Rights Program.

    The AAAS team has used geospatial technology previously to document a
    number of human rights violations, including the 2005 destruction of
    structures and villages in Darfur, Sudan; civilian attacks in Burma
    in 2006 and 2009; structure damage in South Ossetia, Georgia in 2008;
    and mortar fights in Sri Lanka.

    Decreasing computing costs, the growth of available geospatial data,
    and the increase of earth-imaging satellite sensors that provide
    high-resolution images have coalesced to improve the potential
    applications of geospatial technology in the field of human rights.

    The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), U.S. Department
    of State, international governments, the United Nations, and
    nongovernmental organizations including Human Rights Watch have all
    used geospatial technology for humanitarian as well as human rights
    purposes.

    In the future, Wolfinbarger anticipates that the Geospatial
    Technologies and Human Rights Project will use newer, higher resolution
    satellites for detailed vegetation analysis, while lower resolution
    satellites could facilitate deforestation analysis. "While in the past
    we have focused on the destruction of structures, we may be able to
    develop greater expertise in environment-related human rights through
    the use of these other satellites," she said.

    The multispectral satellite images from September 2003 and May 2009
    were taken by DigitalGlobe's QuickBird satellite. The AAAS analysts
    used ERDAS Imagine and ESRI's ArcMap software to do a side-by-side
    comparison of the images.




    From: A. Papazian
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