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Hungary points to int'l law in letting Azeri killer go home

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  • Hungary points to int'l law in letting Azeri killer go home

    Global Times, China
    Sept 2 2012

    Hungary points to int'l law in letting Azeri killer go home

    Xinhua | 2012-9-2 9:45:38


    Hungary acted in line with international law when allowing an Azeri
    soldier who killed an Armenian military officer in Budapest in 2004 to
    go home to serve the remainder of his life sentence there, Hungarian
    authorities said on Saturday.

    The Hungarian Foreign Ministry and the Ministry of Public
    Administration and Justice made the remarks in a press release issued
    on Saturday.

    However, the soldier was immediately pardoned and released on his
    return to Azerbaijan on Friday.

    The Azeri national, Ramil Sahib Safarov, had been sentenced to life
    imprisonment for killing Armenian military officer Gurgen Markaryan in
    2004 in Budapest where the two were attending a NATO training session.

    Armenia responded by cutting off diplomatic ties with Hungary, as the
    Central Asian nation is still in conflict with Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a region that lies within Azerbaijan but has been
    controlled by Armenian troops and ethnic forces since a separatist war
    broke out in 1988.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a cease-fire agreement in 1994 but the
    conflict has never been truly settled despite international mediation
    by the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe that was co-chaired by France, Russia and the United States.

    The killing was believed to be related to these hostilities.

    In fact, recent cross-border clashes have triggered concerns that
    there could be a resumption of fighting in the region, in which there
    are multiple energy pipelines going towards Europe.

    Azerbaijan's Justice Ministry had assured Hungarian officials that
    Safarov would continue serving his sentence in Azerbaijan, but Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev signed an order to pardon him on the day of his
    arrival home.

    Armenia has announced a suspension of diplomatic relations with
    Hungary in protest against the transfer and has suggested that Hungary
    is morally responsible for Safarov's release.

    The Hungarian government press release underlined Hungary's profound
    respect for Armenia, adding that it considered the diplomatic measures
    taken to be unfortunate.

    However, opposition leaders say that government officials should have
    known Safarov would receive a hero's welcome at home and would never
    serve out his sentence. Opposition left-of-center MSZP and Democratic
    Coalition parties are calling for a special session of parliament's
    foreign affairs committee.

    The international echo has reached beyond Armenia. US President Barack
    Obama voiced concern over Safarov's pardon and Washington has asked
    Budapest to explain why it chose to let him return home.

    http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/730503.shtml




    From: A. Papazian
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