REP. ROYCE BLASTS WASHINGTON POST FOR AZERBAIJAN COVERAGE
asbarez
Thursday, October 18th, 2012
Rep. Royce
WASHINGTON-Congressional Armenian Caucus CoChair Ed Royce Wednesday
issued a blog post calling out the recent Washington Post story
glorifying Azerbaijan and citing the Safarov scandal.
Below is Rep. Royce's blog post:
Azerbaijan, J-Lo and the Axe Murderer
BY REPRESENTATIVE ED ROYCE
Washington, Oct 17 - The Washington Post on Monday ran a glowing
page-one article on the energy-rich, Caspian Sea nation of Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijan is "coming to relish its role as the region's anti-Iran,
a secular, Western-leaning country that is working mightily to become
everything that Iran is not." Iran is repressive, but Azerbaijan is
"tolerant," embracing Western music and entertainers, Post readers
were told.
Exhibit-A is a recent Jennifer Lopez concert, flocked to by Azeris.
The article's sub-headline pronounces this "embrace of J-Lo symbolizes
Muslim-majority nation's ascent." More, we are told that the pop
music is actually part of Baku's foreign policy, as "every Western
diva who arrives to croon and titillate" drives the mullahs in Iran
crazy. The embrace of J-Lo, Rihanna and Shakira sure gives the reader
a sense that this is a country moving in the right direction.
This all reminds me a bit of when the Economist pointed to an uptick
of sushi restaurants as a sign of Syria's moderation.
A different rock-star reception reveals another Azerbaijan. Last
month, a convicted axe murderer who nearly decapitated an Armenian
soldier in his sleep was given a hero's welcome. Thousands of Azeris
greeted the ex-soldier at the airport as he returned from Hungary,
scene of his ghastly crime. Eight years ago, the Azeri murdered
the Armenian while both were in Budapest for a "Partnership for
Peace" English language course. The Azerbaijan-Armenia war over the
Nagorno-Karabakh enclave killed 30,000 in the late 80s and 90s and
the two remain bitter foes. But no one expected this brutality.
Sent home under an Azeri promise that he would serve his life sentence
in Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev instead promptly pardoned,
promoted and back paid the murderer. Local media was filled with
stories of how the President saved their hero. I don't care how
many hits J-Lo cranked out, the outfit she wore, or how irritated
the Iranian regime was. When axe murderers are national heroes,
something is askew in Baku.
You don't see President Aliyev's "so I pardoned an axe murderer" tale
in this Post article. The lengthy piece gave just three sentences to
the country's ills, calling it "hardly the perfect role model." I'll
say.
The only thing this Post article tells me is that, next to the regime
in Iran, anyone looks good.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
asbarez
Thursday, October 18th, 2012
Rep. Royce
WASHINGTON-Congressional Armenian Caucus CoChair Ed Royce Wednesday
issued a blog post calling out the recent Washington Post story
glorifying Azerbaijan and citing the Safarov scandal.
Below is Rep. Royce's blog post:
Azerbaijan, J-Lo and the Axe Murderer
BY REPRESENTATIVE ED ROYCE
Washington, Oct 17 - The Washington Post on Monday ran a glowing
page-one article on the energy-rich, Caspian Sea nation of Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijan is "coming to relish its role as the region's anti-Iran,
a secular, Western-leaning country that is working mightily to become
everything that Iran is not." Iran is repressive, but Azerbaijan is
"tolerant," embracing Western music and entertainers, Post readers
were told.
Exhibit-A is a recent Jennifer Lopez concert, flocked to by Azeris.
The article's sub-headline pronounces this "embrace of J-Lo symbolizes
Muslim-majority nation's ascent." More, we are told that the pop
music is actually part of Baku's foreign policy, as "every Western
diva who arrives to croon and titillate" drives the mullahs in Iran
crazy. The embrace of J-Lo, Rihanna and Shakira sure gives the reader
a sense that this is a country moving in the right direction.
This all reminds me a bit of when the Economist pointed to an uptick
of sushi restaurants as a sign of Syria's moderation.
A different rock-star reception reveals another Azerbaijan. Last
month, a convicted axe murderer who nearly decapitated an Armenian
soldier in his sleep was given a hero's welcome. Thousands of Azeris
greeted the ex-soldier at the airport as he returned from Hungary,
scene of his ghastly crime. Eight years ago, the Azeri murdered
the Armenian while both were in Budapest for a "Partnership for
Peace" English language course. The Azerbaijan-Armenia war over the
Nagorno-Karabakh enclave killed 30,000 in the late 80s and 90s and
the two remain bitter foes. But no one expected this brutality.
Sent home under an Azeri promise that he would serve his life sentence
in Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev instead promptly pardoned,
promoted and back paid the murderer. Local media was filled with
stories of how the President saved their hero. I don't care how
many hits J-Lo cranked out, the outfit she wore, or how irritated
the Iranian regime was. When axe murderers are national heroes,
something is askew in Baku.
You don't see President Aliyev's "so I pardoned an axe murderer" tale
in this Post article. The lengthy piece gave just three sentences to
the country's ills, calling it "hardly the perfect role model." I'll
say.
The only thing this Post article tells me is that, next to the regime
in Iran, anyone looks good.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress