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Azerbaijan: Teaching The ABCs Of How To Be A Sniper

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  • Azerbaijan: Teaching The ABCs Of How To Be A Sniper

    AZERBAIJAN: TEACHING THE ABCS OF HOW TO BE A SNIPER
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63468

    EurasiaNet.org
    May 11 2011
    NY

    It's a bright spring morning in Baku, and, at Azerbaijan's only
    non-profit school for snipers, 10 students are diligently taking notes
    about the "peculiarities" of a Russian-made, semi-automatic Dragunov
    sniper rifle and those of a Israeli-made Tavor TAR-21 assault rifle.

    Such sniper lessons could soon be the wave of the future for many
    young Azerbaijanis, if some government officials have their way. In
    April, President Ilham Aliyev stressed that a four-year state youth
    program should place particular emphasis on military training.

    The Baku-based club, VMPTSTS, or the Military Patriotic
    Sports-Technical Society, has already endorsed Aliyev's call with
    a 45-day-long course that teaches Azerbaijanis over the age of 15
    essential combat techniques, including how to be snipers. It is the
    only organization outside of the military that provides such training.

    Valid Gardashly, a spokesperson for VMPTSTS, said the sniper
    training could prove useful, given the fact that Azerbaijan and
    Armenia have been locked in an armed struggle -- both hot and cold
    -- over Nagorno-Karabakh for the past two decades. "Of course, they
    [students] are not going to become professional snipers after our
    lessons, but they will at least be trained to use a weapon and to have
    useful theoretical knowledge to serve in the army," Gardashly said.

    Few in Baku seem to have misgivings about such training. No public
    outcry was heard in April when the Ministry of Education proposed
    lifting a ban on weapons in public schools so that more youngsters
    could learn how to safely handle firearms - all under the auspices
    of the Azerbaijani Youth: 2011-1015 program.

    Of late, outside observers, including experts from the Brussels-based
    the International Crisis Group, have expressed alarm about the
    possibility of renewed warfare between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Analysts in Baku downplay such speculation, however. Maj. Gen.
    Novruzali Orujo, VMPTSTS chairperson, declined to comment about the
    timing of the organization's decision to offer sniper lessons. Club
    members say they simply want Azerbaijani youth to be better prepared
    to serve in the army.

    Five days a week for just over seven weeks, the sniper school's
    24 students, ranging in age from 15 to 48, are drilled in both the
    theory and practice of sniper shooting. Aside from first aid and how
    to load and fire, students, divided equally between males and females,
    dig into such topics as "The Basics of Hand-to-Hand Combat," military
    topography, intelligence gathering and international laws on the use
    of sniper rifles.

    The latter comes in handy for knowing "when and under what conditions
    and against whom a sniper weapon could be used," commented Lt. Col.

    Huseyn Talybov, a former army Special Operations unit commander,
    who is the club's main instructor.

    At a shooting range next to the classroom, students try out their
    handling of the Dragunov and Tavor TAR-21, plus the widely used
    Heckler & Koch MP5 sub-machine gun and the Azerbaijani-made Istiglal
    sniper rifle. A Russian simulator with film scenes lets students try
    shooting at simulated, moving targets -- in a forest setting or during
    a car chase.

    The course ends with three days of exams; successful students receive
    a certificate that attests to their sniper skills. Public school
    students can study - and shoot - for free, while older participants
    pay 50 manats ($63) for the course.

    Motivations for signing up for the VMPTSTS sniper school vary widely.

    The youngest sniper student, 15-year-old Orhan Hojayev, is an
    Internally Displaced Person from Agdam, a sprawling, ruined town in
    northwestern Azerbaijan, which is now occupied by Armenian forces. "I
    want to become a good shot in order to be useful in a fight against
    the enemy in case of war," Hojayev stated flatly.

    Another IDP, 34-year-old Shafag Ismayilova, also said that she wants
    to be ready to "liberate our lands."

    But if this sounds like a made-to-order government program, VMPTSTS
    staffers reject the notion. The organization, a successor to the
    Soviet-era Volunteer Society for Supporting the Army, Air Force and
    Navy, receives no direct government funding, they insist.

    Other than running courses on how to be a sniper - or a parachutist,
    at a site near Azerbaijan's northern border with Georgia - the club
    "earns its own money" by teaching civilians and military personnel
    how to drive, said spokesperson Gardashly.

    For 21-year-old university student Shafag Amrahova, though, learning
    to be a sniper just comes down to a good form of exercise. "I do a
    lot of sports," she said. "I heard about these lessons, it sounded
    interesting and, so, here I am."

    Anything but aerobics, some might say.

    Editor's Note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance journalist
    based in Baku and a board member of the Open Society Assistance
    Foundation-Azerbaijan. Sitara Ibrahimova is a freelance photojournalist
    based in Baku.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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