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Mexicans Puzzled By Azerbaijan Leader Monument. Associated Press

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  • Mexicans Puzzled By Azerbaijan Leader Monument. Associated Press

    MEXICANS PUZZLED BY AZERBAIJAN LEADER MONUMENT. ASSOCIATED PRESS

    ARMENPRESS
    2 October, 2012
    YEREVAN

    YEREVAN, OCTOBER 2, ARMENPRESS: American Associated press referred
    to the Mexicans puzzled by the monument of Geidar Alieyev on Mexico
    City's elegant Reforma Avenue.

    As reports Armenpress AP mainly writes "The appearance of a life-size
    statue of Azerbaijan's "founder of the nation" on Mexico City's
    elegant Reforma Avenue, not far from Mahatma Gandhi, Abraham Lincoln
    and Mexico's national heroes, is raising eyebrows and protests. The
    Stalin-esque, bronze statue of Geidar Aliyev, the late authoritarian
    leader of the Caucasus republic, carries a plaque calling him "a
    brilliant example of infinite devotion to the motherland, loyal to
    the universal ideals of world peace." The monument erected in late
    August shows Aliyev sitting in a bronze chair in front of what appears
    to be an enormous, white marble map of Azerbaijan.

    "It is really out of place," said Miguel Angel Mendoza, an 18-year-old
    high school student who was walking past the monument to the longtime
    ruler, who led Azerbaijan first as Communist Party boss during Soviet
    times and then as president from 1993 to 2003. "Why couldn't they
    put up a monument to somebody who did something good?"

    It turns out that Azerbaijan contributed much of the 65 million pesos
    ($5 million) it cost to renovate not one, but two Mexico City parks,
    allowing it to put monuments in both. Critics say that Aliyev, who
    stifled dissent, shouldn't be on a boulevard decorated with statues
    to Mexican and foreign heroes.

    "They probably have a warehouse full of these things somewhere" in
    Azerbaijan, said Daniel Gershenson, human rights activist who was
    one of about a dozen protesters who demonstrated last week in front
    of the monument, holding banners that read "Get rid of the dictator!"

    "It's like a personality cult, transferred to Mexico," said writer and
    activist Homero Aridjis, who described the style as "social realism
    from the Soviet era.'

    "It's as if they brought a dictator from Mars, "Aridjis said. "Are
    we going to be a center for monuments to dead dictators? Who's next?

    Hitler? Stalin?"

    It wouldn't be the first time that Azerbaijani PR efforts have
    drawn criticism. Rights groups protested Azerbaijan's hosting of
    the Eurovision song contest, and the radical feminist group Femen
    protested its hosting this year's European Cup soccer championship.

    Armenpress reports that Azerbaijan's ambassador to Mexico, Ilgar
    Mukhtarov, wrote that Azerbaijan has lavished attention on Mexico
    because it was one of the first countries to recognize Azerbaijan
    after the breakup of the Soviet Union. "This monument is not intended
    to improve anybody's reputation, because the world's perception of
    Heydar (Geidar) Aliyev does not require any rescuing."

    Aliyev's monument is surrounded by a manicured lawn and flowerbeds,
    and many people like the new park.

    Brenda Torres, a 33-year-old architect, was relaxing on one of the
    four benches installed in front of the monument.

    "The people who come here, they like it, right, but they don't know
    who he is," said Torres.

    And that's the secret to Aliyev's success - nobody really knows who
    he is.

    A second Azerbaijani statue appears in the other park they paid to
    renovate, Tlaxcoaque park in downtown Mexico City.

    It depicts a woman, her arms uplifted in mourning, commemorating
    Khojaly, a village where hundreds of Azerbaijanis were reportedly
    killed during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Advocates say a monument
    to Mexican suffering would have been more appropriate for a site once
    used as a police interrogation and torture center.

    The office of Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard, who accepted the
    donations and attended the inauguration of both sites, did not
    immediately respond to requests for comment.

    But at the inauguration of the first monument, Ebrard said "we are very
    thankful to the Republic of Azerbaijan, because the truth is we haven't
    received an investment this big" from a foreign government before.

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