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Heritage: The 23rd Anniversary Of The Sumgait Genocide

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  • Heritage: The 23rd Anniversary Of The Sumgait Genocide

    HERITAGE: THE 23RD ANNIVERSARY OF THE SUMGAIT GENOCIDE

    Noyan Tapan
    www.nt.am
    28.02.2011

    (Noyan Tapan - 28.02.2011) Today marks the 23rd anniversary of the
    Armenian genocide that took place in the Azerbaijani town of Sumgait.

    Using as a pretext the peaceful and lawful struggle of the people
    of Mountainous Karabagh (Artsakh), who had stood up for their right
    of self-determination and security, the Soviet Azerbaijani regime
    organized and carried out in 1988 a horrific operation geared toward
    the physical annihilation of its Armenian residents. And as a result
    of this action, hundreds of Armenians were either killed or maimed,
    and tens of thousands were forcibly deported toward Armenia and other
    republics of the former USSR.

    But this crime committed in Sumgait was just the continuation of
    official Baku's unrelenting policy of persecution against, and the
    ethnic cleansing of, the Armenian population which, as a consequence
    of Stalin's illegal decision, had found itself-and its indigenous
    lands-within the administrative structure of Soviet Azerbaijan.

    Indeed, it was because of this policy that the ancestral Armenian
    heartland of Nakhichevan was left completely devoid of its native
    Armenian population, whereas in Artsakh the absolute preponderance
    of the Armenian majority had rapidly decreased. Yet this policy
    signified a mere beginning of an ongoing genocide, which resulted
    in the large-scale killing and exile of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians throughout the land-from Baku to Armenian Gandzak.

    Together with Sumgait and its military aggression against Artsakh,
    the now-independent Azerbaijan once more demonstrated its genocidal
    nature and proved that Artsakh can never, and under no status, be a
    part of that country because that will simply jeopardize the security
    of the Armenian population. A state according to which the solution
    of its purported citizens' grievances and the fulfillment of their
    rights lies in their physical extermination and forcible expulsion
    has no right to lay hegemonic claims upon Artsakh.

    And as for the international community-and the grand powers in
    particular-which has left the people of Artsakh all alone against
    Azerbaijani state aggression, today it has no right to demand
    that Artsakh give up its political independence and territorial
    integrity, which it achieved lawfully and owing to its last stand of
    self-defense. Instead, they are obliged to register and recognize
    that sovereignty and integrity to be in full compliance with the
    letter and spirit of international law.




    From: A. Papazian
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