Youth organizations in U.S. commemorate Sumgait massacre victims
27.02.2010 12:55 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Youth organizations in U.S. held Friday a protest
action to commemorate the victims of 1988 Sumgait massacre.
Several dozens of young people gathered in front of the Azerbaijani
Embassy in Washington, scanting `Sumgait massacre -challenge for
humanity', `Independence to Nagorno Karabakh', `We calf for fait
investigation into Sumgait pogroms'.
The massacre of Armenians in Sumgait (a town located a half an hour
drive away from Baku) took place on February 27-29, 1988. The events
were preceded by a wave of anti-Armenian statements and rallies that
swept over Azerbaijan. Almost the entire area of the town with
population of 250 thousand became a site of unhindered mass pogroms.
Armed with iron rods, stones, axes, knives, bottles and canisters full
of petrol, the perpetrators broke in Armenian houses. There were
dozens of casualties, mostly burnt alive after assaults and torture.
Hundreds of innocent people were wounded and disabled. The story of
Sumgait marked the first entry in a long list of crimes against
humanity and ethnic cleansings of the end of the 20th century.
27.02.2010 12:55 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Youth organizations in U.S. held Friday a protest
action to commemorate the victims of 1988 Sumgait massacre.
Several dozens of young people gathered in front of the Azerbaijani
Embassy in Washington, scanting `Sumgait massacre -challenge for
humanity', `Independence to Nagorno Karabakh', `We calf for fait
investigation into Sumgait pogroms'.
The massacre of Armenians in Sumgait (a town located a half an hour
drive away from Baku) took place on February 27-29, 1988. The events
were preceded by a wave of anti-Armenian statements and rallies that
swept over Azerbaijan. Almost the entire area of the town with
population of 250 thousand became a site of unhindered mass pogroms.
Armed with iron rods, stones, axes, knives, bottles and canisters full
of petrol, the perpetrators broke in Armenian houses. There were
dozens of casualties, mostly burnt alive after assaults and torture.
Hundreds of innocent people were wounded and disabled. The story of
Sumgait marked the first entry in a long list of crimes against
humanity and ethnic cleansings of the end of the 20th century.