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  • BAKU: Azerbaijan Permanent Representative To UN Accuses Armenian Rep

    AZERBAIJAN PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE TO UN ACCUSES ARMENIAN REPRESENTATIVE OF LIE

    Trend
    March 29 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijan's permanent representation to the UN distributed a letter
    of reply to a letter from the permanent representation of Armenia to
    the UN regarding the Khojaly events.

    The letter reflects the cruelty of the armed forces of Armenia against
    Azerbaijani civilians, the views of foreign media representatives,
    who witnessed the atrocity committed by Armenian armed forces against
    civilians, and the views of the Armenian servicemen and intellectuals,
    who participated in the slaughter, press service of Azerbaijani
    Foreign Ministry reported.

    "I would like to draw your attention to the letter dated 24 February
    2010 from the Permanent Representative of the Republic of Armenia to
    the United Nations, contained in document A/64/680-S/2010/102. This
    letter, which purports to respond to my letter addressed to you
    in connection with the eighteenth anniversary of an unprecedented
    massacre of the Azerbaijani population in the town of Khojaly
    (A/64/658-S/2010/78 of 8 February 2010), is not a single example
    of sophisticated and blatant falsification, by means of which the
    Armenian side attempts to deny its responsibility for the serious
    crimes committed during the aggression against Azerbaijan," the
    permanent representative of Azerbaijan to the UN, ambassador Agshin
    Mehdiyev said in his letter.

    "The Armenian side feigns ignorance of the fact that its responsibility
    for the brutal killings during one night from 25 to 26 February
    1992 of 613 residents of Khojaly is recognized and documented by
    numerous independent sources, eyewitnesses of the tragedy, as well
    as admitted by Armenia's high-ranking officials and public sources,"
    the letter says.

    "Thus, the Permanent Representative of the Republic of Armenia omits
    clarifying the words of his country's then defence minister and current
    President, Serzh Sargsyan, who unequivocally admitted culpability
    for extermination of the inhabitants of Khojaly (Thomas de Wall,
    Black Garden. Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War (New York
    and London: New York University Press, 2003), p. 172), as well as the
    revelations of another Armenian author who gave a detailed account
    of how Armenian soldiers had been killing the residents of Khojaly
    (Markar Melkonian, My Brother's Road. An American's Fateful Journey
    to Armenia (London and New York: I. B. Tauris, 2005), pp. 213-214),"
    the diplomat says in his letter.

    "The Permanent Representative of the Republic of Armenia refers to
    ambiguous, politically motivated and groundless interpretations of
    the events in Khojaly, according to which the Azerbaijanis themselves
    allegedly "prevented the evacuation of the local civilian population
    from the military operation zone" and "the Azerbaijani militia
    shot those who attempted to flee" in order "to utilize civilian
    losses of such a magnitude" for internal political purposes. It is
    no coincidence that such a preposterous idea immediately collapses
    like a house of cards under the weight of evidence testifying of a
    situation diametrically opposite to that represented by the Armenian
    side," Mehdiyev said.

    According to Mehdiyev, the Armenian propaganda is not fastidious about
    any means it uses in attempts to enlist at least a kind of support
    to its cynical allegations. Thus, while manipulating the content of
    the Helsinki Watch report of 1992, the Permanent Representative of the
    Republic of Armenia seems to have forgotten that this non-governmental
    human rights organization had officially responded to the gross
    misinterpretation of its position by the Armenian side.

    Furthermore, the letter of the Permanent Representative of the
    Republic of Armenia is yet another illustration of the Armenian side's
    "forgetfulness" as to the chronology of events pertaining to the
    beginning of the present-day stage of the conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, Mehdiyev said. According to him, thus, the Armenian
    side passes over in silence that the events in some Azerbaijani
    cities, notably in Sumgait on 26-28 February 1988, were preceded by
    a number of illegal declarations and decisions taken with a view to
    securing the unilateral secession of Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan,
    attacks at the end of 1987 on the Azerbaijanis in Khankandi (during
    the Soviet period - Stepanakert) and Armenia, resulting in a flood
    of Azerbaijani refugees and internally displaced persons who were
    directed, among other places, to Sumgait. It must be also recalled
    that on the eve of disturbances in Sumgait, namely on 22 February
    1988, near the settlement of Asgaran on the Khankandi-Aghdam highway,
    the Armenians opened fire on a peaceful demonstration, killing two
    Azerbaijani youths.

    "While trying to qualify the events in Sumgait as either "pogroms"
    or "massacre" against Armenians, the Armenian propaganda at the same
    time prefers not to mention at all a number of circumstances that
    are of vital importance in elucidating the true causes of these events.

    Indeed, on 26-28 February 1988, 26 Armenians and Azerbaijanis were
    killed in Sumgait. It is notable that one of the leading figures in
    these disturbances was a certain Edward Grigorian, an Armenian and
    native of Sumgait, who was directly involved in the killings and
    violence against the Armenians," the letter says.

    "Whereas it has been internationally recognized that the occupation by
    force of the Nagorny Karabakh region and adjacent areas of Azerbaijan
    and the ethnic cleansing of the captured territories constitute
    a flagrant breach by the Republic of Armenia of its obligations
    under international law, it is curious that the Armenian propaganda
    continues to qualify the aggression against Azerbaijan as "a peaceful
    demand of the Nagorno-Karabakh people to exercise its right to
    self-determination"," the permanent representative of Azerbaijan says.

    "The Government of the Republic of Azerbaijan made it clear more than
    once, and I am instructed to point it out once again, that Armenia's
    claims to the application of the principle of self-determination
    are contrary to and unsustainable in international law. Otherwise,
    this would be tantamount to accepting the results of a violation of
    fundamental norms of international law, including, in particular,
    those relating to the most serious international crimes as well as
    a rule prohibiting the use of force," Mehdiyev concluded.
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