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At Mexico City park, statue of Azerbaijan leader elicits protest

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  • At Mexico City park, statue of Azerbaijan leader elicits protest

    At Mexico City park, statue of Azerbaijan leader elicits protest

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/696967/at-mexico-city-park-statue-of-azerbaijan-leader-elicits-protest.html
    22:42, 20 October, 2012

    The leafy green parks of Mexico City's elegant Polanco neighborhood
    have their politically comforting statues. There's Abraham Lincoln,
    poised thoughtfully near a shallow pond. Across from him, there's
    Martin Luther King. And a few blocks away, Mohandas Gandhi.

    And then there's the newest addition, a real head-scratcher: Heydar
    Aliyev, the late strongman of Azerbaijan.

    The presence of Aliyev, in larger-than-life bronze on a well-traveled
    segment of the city's iconic Reforma Boulevard, has infuriated
    residents. At least those few who are able to figure out who he is.

    "It would be like taking the Washington Mall, and putting a memorial
    for Idi Amin there," said Eduardo Farah, a community activist,
    referring to the former Ugandan dictator.

    Farah led a small demonstration the other day at Aliyev's feet. Some
    of the 20 or so participants waved a banner calling for removal of
    "the dictator."

    "This is an affront," said demonstrator Homero Aridjis, an acclaimed
    poet and environmentalist. "We have enough bad symbols here in Mexico,
    we don't need to import them from outside."

    The government of Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic a gazillion
    miles from Mexico (more than 7,800, for you sticklers), was allowed to
    erect the statue after paying to spruce up that particular corner of
    Polanco, even though that meant tearing down a few trees. It spent $3
    million to $5 million for the 1/3 -acre patch plus another park
    downtown.

    Aliyev sits on a white marble pedestal, his name embossed in golden
    letters, in front of a jagged stone map of Azerbaijan. Wrought iron
    benches for viewing surround the statue and a plaque tells us that the
    former KGB master, who ruled from 1993 until just before his death in
    2003, "is a shining example of infinite devotion to the homeland" who
    steered Azerbaijan through "prosperous democratic development."

    There's no mention of WikiLeaks cables in which an American ambassador
    compared the Aliyev dynasty to the Mafia's Corleone family. Or to
    Azerbaijan's ranking by Transparency International as one of the most
    corrupt countries, or its many years on a U.S. government blacklist.
    Or to the numerous human rights reports that accuse the Aliyevs -
    Heydar was succeeded by his son Ilham -of repressing domestic dissent.

    Farah, Aridjis and the other activists have something else in mind:
    How about the Park of Shame?

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