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Sassounian: Artsakh Armenians Can Never Live Under Azeri Rule

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  • Sassounian: Artsakh Armenians Can Never Live Under Azeri Rule

    SASSOUNIAN: ARTSAKH ARMENIANS CAN NEVER LIVE UNDER AZERI RULE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    September 21, 2011 - 13:08 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Publisher of The California Courier Harut Sassounian
    revealed the details of Scottish researcher Steven Sim's reports about
    his troubling experiences in Nakhichevan and attitude that Azerbaijan
    holds about Armenians.

    The report shows why it is impossible for Armenians of Artsakh to
    live ever again under oppressive Azeri rule.

    "Sim stated that he entered Nakhichevan by land from Turkey and
    travelled to the village of Abrakunis at Yernjak valley. When he
    asked a 12-year-old about an ancient church there, the boy pointed
    to an empty piece of land.

    Sim next visited Bananiyar, known to Armenians as Aparank, where he
    reported that "at least until the 1970s there were some ruins of a
    large medieval church located on high ground in the middle of the
    village. Now a mosque is built on the former church grounds.

    On his 3rd day in Nakhichivan, while travelling by train to Julfa,
    Sim observed the remains of the Jugha graveyard. He reported seeing
    "a hillside covered by stone slabs, spread out over three ridges. All
    of the gravestones had been toppled, without any exceptions.

    In Ordubad, Sim was taken to the police station where his bag was
    searched, as he was interrogated about the purpose of his visit. In
    Shurut, Sim was confronted by a group of villagers. When he said that
    he had come to see the old church, they told him that there was never
    a church in their village. As he left Shurut, the taxi driver told
    Sim that the villagers had phoned the police in Julfa and that law
    enforcement officials would probably be waiting for him somewhere
    along the road," Sassounian said.

    "If a Scottish visitor is treated so poorly, imagine how much
    worse Azeris treated their Armenian subjects in Artsakh until its
    liberation," Sim stressed.

    Sim's revealing report was released in 2006, yet has not been
    adequately publicized in the international media.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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