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BAKU: Azerbaijani Diaspora In US To Educate US Media And Politicians

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  • BAKU: Azerbaijani Diaspora In US To Educate US Media And Politicians

    AZERBAIJANI DIASPORA IN US TO EDUCATE US MEDIA AND POLITICIANS ON FACTS SURROUNDING TRAGIC EVENTS IN SUMGAIT

    APA
    Feb 10 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Washington. Isabel Levine - APA. The Azerbaijani Diaspora in US
    has decided to educate the US media and politicians on the facts
    surrounding the tragic events of February 28, 1988 in the city
    of Sumgait.

    According to APA's Washington correspondent, the members of Diaspora
    started sending letters to fundamental US broadcasting and print
    services and politicians on the subjects of Sumgait, March Massacres
    (day of Genocide against Azerbaijanis) and the Armenian issue of 1915.

    "It is important to set the record straight on the issue to better
    understand the turbulence of the time, complexity of the Caucasus
    region and how rapidly can relations between two communities of
    people deteriorate, leading one to an aggressive, expansionist
    behavior, occupying lands (e.g., 16% of Azerbaijan), carrying out
    ethnic cleansing (e.g., 800,000 Azerbaijani refugees and IDPs), and
    committing crimes against humanity (e.g, Khojaly)" -Diaspora stated
    on February 10th.

    According to the Azeri Diaspora, "for over two decades, the
    Armenian lobby and propaganda have been using Sumgait events to
    lambast Azerbaijan and to justify their actions against the people
    of Azerbaijan".

    The authors are reminding that, "Sumgait Pogroms" refer to tragic
    events which took place in the era of "perestroika" in the waning days
    of the Soviet Union, in the economically-depressed and poverty-stricken
    Azerbaijani industrial town of Sumgait (pop.

    300,000). As a result of the unfortunate provocations, according to
    official data, a total of 32 people were killed (26 ethnic Armenian,
    6 ethnic Azerbaijani), many more were wounded, substantial private
    and public property damage occurred due to vandalism and looting.

    "This was the first instance of what was labeled as an inter-ethnic
    strife in an otherwise multi-cultural, ethnically and religiously
    diverse, and historically tolerant Azerbaijan, but was quickly picked
    up by Armenian nationalists and propaganda, with heavily inflated
    casualty figures, as an example of large-scale massacre and perhaps
    even "genocide". Before too long, the tragedy of Sumgait Pogroms
    was spiraled out of control, and became accepted as an example of
    persecution of Armenians, and the cause of Nagorno-Karabakh (NK) war
    between then-Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan. Such allegations are still
    made by Armenian nationalist circles, including in the United States,
    where they take advantage of their numerical strength and overwhelm the
    U.S. public opinion with false propaganda claims" - the letter says.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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