AZERBAIJANIS LOSE APPETITE BECAUSE OF A SONG - NEWSPAPER
news.am
Oct 21 2011
Armenia
YEREVAN. - Session of the countries of the Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS) Interior Ministers' Council was held in the Armenian
capital Yerevan, and, as it is known, Azerbaijani Minister of Internal
Affairs Ramil Usubov was among the officials who had arrived in
Yerevan, Chorrord Inknishkhanutyun daily writes.
"A fairly interesting incident occurred during the informal part
of that gathering. Armenia's Police Chief Alik Sargsyan invited the
CIS interior ministers to a restaurant for a sumptuous dinner. [And]
In order to secure the fun with song and dance, the Police Force also
invited several representatives from Armenian show business. And one
of them, Vardan Badalyan, who is born in Karabakh, began singing a song
from his album, and the song was dedicated to Karabakh. The Azerbaijani
delegation suddenly lost appetite from the [song's] chorus line,
where the word Karabakh continuously repeated. They simply put down
[their] knives and forks, and with an apparent discontent began loudly
complaining about what has happened. Armenia's Police Chief and his
entourage fell in an awkward situation and were compelled to reassure
that there is no political insinuation, and that the singer simply
chose that song from his repertoire," Chorrord Inknishkhanutyun writes.
news.am
Oct 21 2011
Armenia
YEREVAN. - Session of the countries of the Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS) Interior Ministers' Council was held in the Armenian
capital Yerevan, and, as it is known, Azerbaijani Minister of Internal
Affairs Ramil Usubov was among the officials who had arrived in
Yerevan, Chorrord Inknishkhanutyun daily writes.
"A fairly interesting incident occurred during the informal part
of that gathering. Armenia's Police Chief Alik Sargsyan invited the
CIS interior ministers to a restaurant for a sumptuous dinner. [And]
In order to secure the fun with song and dance, the Police Force also
invited several representatives from Armenian show business. And one
of them, Vardan Badalyan, who is born in Karabakh, began singing a song
from his album, and the song was dedicated to Karabakh. The Azerbaijani
delegation suddenly lost appetite from the [song's] chorus line,
where the word Karabakh continuously repeated. They simply put down
[their] knives and forks, and with an apparent discontent began loudly
complaining about what has happened. Armenia's Police Chief and his
entourage fell in an awkward situation and were compelled to reassure
that there is no political insinuation, and that the singer simply
chose that song from his repertoire," Chorrord Inknishkhanutyun writes.