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Budapest: PM defends transfer of axe murderer

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  • Budapest: PM defends transfer of axe murderer

    The Budapest Times, Hungaria
    Oct 7 2012


    PM defends transfer of axe murderer

    Ombudsman renews request for documents on repatriation of Ramir Safarov

    Posted on 07 October 2012


    The decision to repatriate the convicted murderer of an Armenian
    soldier to Azerbaijan was the correct one, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán
    told Parliament on Monday. The handover of Ramir Safarov ` who was
    pardoned and feted as a national hero upon his return to Baku `
    sparked an international diplomatic incident at the end of August and
    prompted Armenia to sever ties with Hungary.

    Safarov had been serving a 30-year jail term for using an axe to slay
    the soldier in his bed while both were attending a UN-sponsored
    language course in Budapest in 2004.
    Socialist MP and former foreign minister László Kovács had asked
    Orbán to explain why the government had been satisfied with a pledge
    by Azerbaijan not to commute Safarov's sentence, when the country made
    no specific pledge not to pardon him.

    Hungary's interest:?PM

    Orbán reiterated the government's position that it acted in line with
    international law. `We would have done the same if an Armenian had
    killed an Azerbaijani,' he was quoted as saying by state news agency
    MTI. `Hungary should follow its own interests rather than those of
    Armenia or Azerbaijan.'

    He repeated the government's denial that any kind of backroom deal
    was struck with Baku. The transfer of Safarov meant the tension
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the disputed territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh was no longer a domestic problem, Orbán said.
    `Hungary has got out of it by transferring the Azeri convict. As long
    as he was here he caused plenty of conflicts and difficulties, and the
    situation would not have changed in the future either.'

    Ombudsman wants answers

    In related news, the office of Fundamental Rights Ombudsman Máté Szabó
    said on Tuesday that the Justice Ministry had not responded within 15
    days to a request for information regarding Safarov's repatriation.
    The ministry responded by saying that Justice Minister Tibor
    Navracsics had replied promptly to Szabó's letter of 19 September,
    asking the ombudsman to submit an official request for access to
    classified documents.

    Szabó had noted in his letter that Hungarian law prevents the
    repatriation of a convicted criminal in the absence of assurances that
    he will serve out the remainder of his sentence. The documents
    released by the government as the scandal broke in the days following
    Safarov's release contained no assurances from the Azeri side that the
    murderer would not be pardoned, referring only to a clause in the
    relevant treaty that prevents the alteration of the sentence.

    http://www.budapesttimes.hu/2012/10/07/pm-defends-transfer-of-axe-murderer/

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