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Armenia Severs Diplomatic Ties with Hungary Over Clemency Row

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  • Armenia Severs Diplomatic Ties with Hungary Over Clemency Row

    Qatar News Agency
    September 1, 2012 Saturday 1:03 PM EST

    Armenia Severs Diplomatic Ties with Hungary Over Clemency Row



    Yerevan, September 01 (QNA) - Armenia has cut diplomatic ties with
    Hungary after Budapest allowed an Azerbaijani soldier who was
    convicted of killing an Armenian officer to return to his home
    country, according to news reports.

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, during a meeting with UN
    ambassadors, said, "I officially declare that starting today, we cease
    diplomatic relations and all official ties with Hungary."

    In a short statement, the president said he decreed Friday that
    Safarov "Should be freed from the term of his punishment," according
    to media reports.

    Azerbaijani Lieutenant Ramil Safarov was warmly welcomed in the
    capital, Baku, after arriving from Hungary, where he was imprisoned
    for murder. He was immediately pardoned and freed by his country's
    president

    Safarov was given a life sentence in 2006 by the Budapest City Court
    after he confessed to hacking to death Lieutenant Gurgen Markarian of
    Armenia in his sleep.

    The incident happened while both were in Hungary for a 2004 language
    course of the NATO military alliance. Yet, as soon as Safarov arrived
    at the Baku airport, he received an official pardon from Azerbaijan's
    President Ilham Aliyev.

    In his initial testimony, Safarov explained that during the 1993
    Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, the majority ethnic Armenian
    region of Azerbaijan where he was born, members of his family were
    killed in the resulting military conflict. Safarov implied that he
    killed Margaryan to avenge his relatives.

    He later changed his testimony, claiming his initial statement was the
    result of a miscommunication between he and his interpreters. In a
    revised version of his testimony, Safarov claimed that Margaryan had
    insulted Azerbaijan's national flag.

    The trial was held in Budapest in 2006; a Hungarian court sentenced
    Safarov to life in prison, and he could not appeal for pardon for 30
    years. (QNA)

    SSS,MD

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