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Maragha: An 'Example Of Azeri Crimes Against Humanity,' Says Barones

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  • Maragha: An 'Example Of Azeri Crimes Against Humanity,' Says Barones

    MARAGHA: AN 'EXAMPLE OF AZERI CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY,' SAYS BARONESS COX
    Baroness Cox

    asbarez
    April 10th, 2012

    On the 20th anniversary of the Azeri massacres of Armenians in the
    Maragha village north of Mardakert, Panorama.am interviewed Baroness
    Cox, who went to the village a day later in 1992 and witnessed
    first-hand what she called "cold blooded slaughter of civilians."

    Below we present this important interview, thanking our colleagues
    at panorama.am.

    Panorama.am: You went to Maragha village right after the mass
    atrocities of April 10, 1992 - 20 years ago, when the village and its
    inhabitants were wiped out by the Azeri militia and the army. Do you
    have any untold memories to share?

    Baroness Cox: Indeed, too many memories. We were in Stepanakert [then],
    and we heard there was an attack on the village, called Maragha. We
    immediately went out there on the day itself. Homes were still burning,
    still smoldering. We saw the evidence of the atrocities which had
    been carried out. I saw human bodies, beheaded. We had to do very
    unhappy thing of asking the local villagers if they would mind us to
    take photographic evidence of the bodies that they started to bury...

    I have one in front of me at the moment... And I also have a photograph
    in front of me of a villager holding an ear of his Armenian friend,
    which had been cut off by Azeris. So the horror was there. We also
    met some women, who survived, with photographs of their loved ones
    taken from their smoldering homes in order to have memories of their
    families who perished...

    Panorama.am: I want to ask you to touch upon the international
    campaign of the governments of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh to bring
    in international outcry on the atrocity. What has been done so far,
    and what do you think should be done in this regards?

    Baroness Cox: Ever since I witnessed the atrocities of what happened
    in Maragha, I have been urging the Armenian Government and [Nagorno]
    Karabakh Government to get the story told to the international
    community, to raise this as a really serious example of Azeri crimes
    against humanity. What happened in Maragha was a serious [crime]
    in terms of cold blooded slaughter of civilians with decapitation
    and burning.

    The Government of Nagorno Karabakh has indeed published an account
    of what happened in Maragha. I think the Governments of Armenia and
    Nagorno Karabakh should make efforts to place it on the news screens
    of international community: it was an absolutely horrendous, cold
    blooded crime, a deliberate slaughter of innocent civilians in a brutal
    way. And I think the Armenian Government really should be making it an
    international issue, and taking Azerbaijan into international arena,
    to get this horrible situation on the record, and Azerbaijan called
    to international accountability.

    What happened in Maragha is an untold truth, and needs to be told
    both for justice and for the people of Maragha who suffered so much,
    their survivors shall know that justice is served, and Azerbaijan to
    be brought to account for that apparent crime against humanity.

    Panorama.am: Following up on what you just said, considering there
    was no "military necessity" to wage an attack on Maragha, and it was
    quite far from where the war was taking place, can we claim it was
    a war crime and/or a crime against humanity, as you phrased it?

    Baroness Cox: It is certain that what I saw was clearly an apparent
    crime against humanity, which needs investigation. I saw a bloody
    slaughter against innocent civilians, innocent villagers. Armenia
    really needs to make a case for recognition of that as a crime
    against humanity.

    Panorama.am: Few days ago when the Armenian parliament members were
    visiting Baku for Euronest part session, Mr. Aliyev, the President
    of Azerbaijan, called them "fascists". In an earlier statement
    he proclaimed "Armenians world over are the number one enemy of
    Azerbaijan." Judging from the current totalitarian regime of Mr.

    Aliyev and his family, do you think international recognition of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is the best measure toward the prevention
    of new atrocities?

    Baroness Cox: I think there are the "Madrid Principles," which are on
    the table, which I think is agreed by the international community as
    an appropriate way forward. They would give the Armenians of Nagorno
    Karabakh the right to self determination and for secession, and it
    should be internationally recognized in the same way as other valid
    recognitions of the right of self determination and secession have
    been granted to the people that had been subjected or attempted to
    ethnic cleansing. There is no doubt that Azerbaijan had the intent
    upon ethnic cleansing upon the Armenians living in Nagorno Karabakh.

    The President [Abdulfaz] Elchibey once said his "famous" statement
    that if a single Armenian was left alive in Karabakh by next October,
    then the people of Azerbaijan could take him and hang him at the
    center square of Baku. This was a pretty forceful statement of ethnic
    cleansing. The whole policy of the Operation "Ring" was a tacit
    example of ethnic cleansing. So they have the right, I believe, for
    self determination and secession, the same was as any other minority
    group in a country where the regime of that country is trying to
    exterminate them physically and culturally.

    Panorama.am: The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance
    (ECRI) report last year alarmed, that it's unsafe to show Armenian
    identity in Azerbaijan, as the person would risk getting into huge
    troubles, to put it in a smooth way. What steps shall the international
    community undertake for easing the human rights and freedoms issue
    there, and eventually - for denazification of Azerbaijan?

    Baroness Cox: Well, I think, Azerbaijan is a country that carries out
    oppressive measures such as, as we all know, inhibitions on the freedom
    of speech. I think, there has been somebody who tried to tell the truth
    about Khojaly, and he had been imprisoned. Any attempt of inhibition
    of telling the truth is a fundamental violation of the fundamental
    human right of freedom of speech. Any country which contravenes those
    fundamental human rights, as defined in the Universal Declaration
    of Human Rights, should be called into account, and there should be
    measures taken against this. So I think there need to be recognition,
    and much more robust calling into account to Azerbaijan for its human
    rights violations against its own people today, who are suffering an
    absence of any respect toward their human rights. Azerbaijan human
    rights record is extremely unsatisfactory.

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