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BAKU: 'Nobody Else Would Do It For You Just Because You Are Victim'

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  • BAKU: 'Nobody Else Would Do It For You Just Because You Are Victim'

    'NOBODY ELSE WOULD DO IT FOR YOU JUST BECAUSE YOU ARE VICTIM'

    news.az
    June 30 2010
    Azerbaijan

    News.Az interviews David Dean Judson, editor-in-chief of Hurriyet
    Daily News & Economic Review.

    Let me ask you a question as you are an expert in information warfare
    issues. There is an infowar policy between Armenia from one side and
    Azerbaijan and Turkey from another side. Which side has succeeded
    more in this war and has more advantages?

    I think a good place to start any analysis of war and information
    warfare is not were we typically start. And we typically start by
    looking at the stories that journalists are working on. The Armenians
    are working on this, writing that, Azerbaijanis are writing this,
    the British are writing that. I think the more important way to
    consider the way the global media works is think about the stories
    the journalist are working from. We all work from a collection of
    cultural histories, prejudices, stereotypes.

    Just a few days ago one of the research fellows from the Centre
    of strategic studies under the President of Republic of Azerbaijan
    showed me an essay that's coming up a few days in the publication
    from Chatham house, the second or third most sophisticated, most
    respected foreign policy journals in the world. The essay is on
    Caspian politics. The journalist that wrote that story in first or
    second paragraph describes Azerbaijan. And the first sentences are:
    "Azerbaijan is an overwhelmingly Muslim country"... "Overwhelming" is
    a negative term. You would never describe America as "overwhelmingly
    Christian country". "Overwhelming" is a term of violence in fact.

    I don't think that the journalist was probably trying to be prejudice
    towards Azerbaijan. But this is the story is working from. The next
    paragraph was "Armenia is a blockaded nation, that was in the third
    century the first nation to accept Christianity". So before we've
    got to the fourth paragraph of that story we basically have in our
    mythology the Muslim army fighting against beleaguered Christians. It
    is story out the Bible almost, it is a parable.

    So I think that where the media work, where obviously the Armenians
    have the advantage it's still for against you. Because they have the
    supporting their effort to tell their story is symbolic baggage of
    Western civilization and culture prejudices and Orientalism. The real
    battle in many ways is a battle of symbols in Orientalism. Because
    that's the way journalists do their job. And getting journalists to
    take responsibility for what they do, Western journalist, Eastern
    journalist, Northern journalist, Southern journalist. And analyze
    their own prejudices are before they begin a task because I think
    often such a problems are unintentional, they are culturally based.

    This is something we can solve, this is something we can challenge,
    but it is not something we can ignore.

    Armenians are trying to represent themselves as victims of Turks and
    Azerbaijanis. And what should Azerbaijan do in this information war?

    Should we follow the Armenian example or speak a lot about our
    achievements?

    There are two answers to that question. Of course the tragedy, the
    drama, the victimhood of the 1 million people who lost their homes,
    family members, treasure and others are not something that could be
    forgotten and ignored, this is a real victimhood. But in terms of
    trying to communicate, I mean the world is weary.

    We met with refugees in Baku. I was given a photographic book about
    the victims of Karabakh. It reminded me the book I have in my house
    that was given me by my farther. It was printed in 1953 called "We
    are humans too" about the refugees of Gaza. The dramatic photographs
    of the victims... So the situation has got worse since 1953 for the
    victims of Gaza, not better. On the one hand, we have to remember
    and not forget and to heal the wounds of those who have suffered,
    but at the same time we have to find ways not be victims, to get
    beyond the drama and as you said, to focus on building our lives,
    building your country, building your economy. Because nobody else
    would do it for you just because you are a victim.




    From: A. Papazian
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