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Azerbaijani Students Make Negligent Political Claims At The Uc Irvin

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  • Azerbaijani Students Make Negligent Political Claims At The Uc Irvin

    AZERBAIJANI STUDENTS MAKE NEGLIGENT POLITICAL CLAIMS AT THE UC IRVINE
    BY TALAR MALAKIAN

    http://asbarez.com/106740/azerbaijani-students-make-negligent-political-claims-at-the-uc-irvine/

    The crowd at the UC Irvine presentation

    IRIVINE-On Thursday, November 15, more than a hundred community
    members and University of California- Irvine students attended the
    lecture entitled "The Karabakh Conflict From Ceasefire to Safarov:
    Analysis Via Television News Coverage: 1990s to 2012" hosted by the
    Armenian Studies Program at UC-Irvine. The lecturer for the evening
    was Dr. Levon Marashlian, a professor of History at Glendale Community
    College and a guest lecturer at California State University Northridge,
    the University of California- Irvine, and the University of California-
    Los Angeles.

    The moderator for the evening was Professor Touraj Daryaee, a professor
    of Persian Studies and a major contributor to the UCI Armenian Studies
    Program. The informative lecture concluded with a Question and Answer
    session in which several Azerbaijani students made political claims
    that were misquoted and negligent of the information presented during
    the lecture.

    The lecture began at 7:30 p.m. following a reception hosted by the
    program. Professor Marashlian showed news coverage of the various
    events in the Karabakh struggle, that began in February 1988,
    when the Supreme Soviet rule of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast,
    voted to unite with Armenia, with between a 76% and 94% majority of
    Armenians. By the summer of 1989 the Armenian-populated areas of the
    NKAO were under blockade by Azerbaijan. On July 12 the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Supreme Soviet voted to secede from Azerbaijan, which was rejected,
    and in 1991, the oblast was back under Azerbaijani control. Marashlian,
    in discussing the series of events chronologically, began by stating,
    "both sides suffered greatly" during the time of war between Azerbaijan
    and Armenia, with great losses on both ends. Video coverage included
    images of Azerbaijani and Armenian losses during the war.

    Professor Marashlian discussed the various requirements of the
    Madrid Principles adopted by Armenia for ceasefire in 2005, which
    is constantly being breached on both ends in a tense deadlock but
    which grants Armenians some sort of autonomy in Azerbaijan until both
    countries agree to let the region take a vote on its independence. He
    concluded with several points drawn from his historical analysis of
    the situation: Armenia needed Nagorno-Karabakh because Karabakh is a
    current source of food and revenue for Armenia given that Armenia is
    blockaded by both Turkey and Azerbaijan, leaving it "isolated" due to
    "poor diplomacy."

    He pointed out that Azerbaijan did not need Nagorno-Karabakh
    geographically, because the oil running through Azerbaijan brings in
    roughly $13 billion. Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan only makes
    their oil susceptible to damage by internal conflict in the region. He
    concluded his lecture by stating that President Aliyev's act of freeing
    and promoting axe-murderer Ramil Safarov only a few months ago is a
    message to the rest of the world and to Nagorno-Karabakh's future:
    it is acceptable to murder defenseless Armenians in their sleep,
    and autonomy in Azerbaijan means Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh may
    be on the verge of facing another genocide.

    Azerbaijani students, present at the event, attacked the professor
    in the Question-and-answer session. Professor Marashlian was asked
    to draw a contrast between Ramil Safarov and Varoujan Garabedian,
    a man convicted for the 1983 ASALA bombing of the Turkish Airlines
    office in Paris. The Azeri student claimed that the two situations
    were the same. Professor Marashlian answered in stating that the two
    situations were different since Garabedian had completed his sentence
    in France and then was deported from France, but was not pardoned and
    promoted in Armenia, nor was he treated as a hero. He had simply been
    given citizenship by Armenia. The students insisted the two cases
    were the same, but then continued on to several other issues.

    In a subsequent question, an Azerbaijani attendee asked the professor,
    why he had not explicitly mentioned the 1992 Khojaly Massacre, the
    killing of civilians during the early Karabakh conflict. Marashlian
    insisted that he showed the photos from Khojaly, and did mention that
    both sides of this war had experienced many losses. The Azerbaijani
    students insisted on continuing the discussion by bringing up Markar
    Melkonian's "My Brother's Road" - the diary of Armenia's National Hero
    and Armenian-American, Monte (Avo) Melkonian. Professor Marashlian
    responded again that both sides suffered losses and that the Sumgait
    riots during which 26 Armenians and 6 Azerbaijanis were killed was a
    triggering event for the conflict that led to war. Marashlian also
    mentioned the Azerbaijani photographer who had concluded, based on
    photographic evidence, that many of the bodies found at Khojaly were
    moved there, and that after publishing his findings he was executed
    by Azerbaijani forces.

    Another Azerbaijani student yelled that she had been born and raised
    in Nagorno-Karabakh and that the professor's claim to there being
    no Azerbaijani people in Karabakh was wrong, and that the 800,000
    Azerbaijani refugees had a right to go back to their homes. Professor
    Marashlian reiterated that the entire population of Nagorno-Karabakh
    was approximately 1750,000 before the war, and that the majority
    were Armenian. He also emphasized that the Armenian government was
    prepared to return the regions jus outside the borders of the Republic
    to Azerbaijan as part of the Madrid principles, thus allowing the
    majority too return to their homes. He also pointed out that those
    regions were held merely for security reasons and were a staging
    ground for Azerbaijani acts of aggression, just as the current sniper
    fire continues.

    Because of the tense atmosphere of the lecture, Professor Daryaee asked
    Professor Marashlian to conclude with a statement. Professor Marashlian
    concluded with attention to the severity of the case: Armenians in
    Nagorno-Karabakh are facing a deadlock that can erupt in war and
    genocide at any moment. Without activism to keep Nagorno-Karabakh,
    Armenia itself will eventually disappear.

    Talar Malakian is the Chairperson of the Armenian National Committee
    of America Orange County Chapter, which defends the rights, advances
    the interests, and promotes the well being of the county's Armenian
    American community and promotes increased civic participation at the
    grassroots and public policy levels.

    1 Response for "Azerbaijani Students Make Negligent Political Claims
    at the UC Irvine"

    Not an inch of land should be given back to Azerbaijan. They have
    proven time and time again that they are incapable of negotiating
    a truce. Glorifying a convicted murderer, threatening to shoot
    down civilian aircraft's, declaring Armenians from all around the
    world as an enemy of the state clearly proves that peace can not be
    achieved. Lets not forget the historical truth behind this conflict.

    The regions of Artsakh and Nakhichevan were and are historically part
    of Armenia, unfortunately, for multiple reasons, Stalin decided to
    annex both regions over to Soviet Azerbaijan even though the majority
    of the population was Armenian. I sincerely hope that a peace agreement
    can be reached, but this is not a realistic solution as long as one
    party continuously undermine




    From: A. Papazian
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