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Hungarians Protest Against Release Of Azeri Officer

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  • Hungarians Protest Against Release Of Azeri Officer

    HUNGARIANS PROTEST AGAINST RELEASE OF AZERI OFFICER

    Updated News
    http://updatednews.ca/2012/09/04/hungarians-protest-against-release-of-azeri-officer/
    Sept 4 2012
    Canada

    Almost 2,000 Hungarians protested in Budapest on Tuesday against
    the government's decision to allow an Azeri soldier who had killed
    an Armenian officer in 2004 to return home, leading to heightened
    tensions between the neighboring countries.

    Last week Hungary released soldier Ramil Safarov to Baku, where Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev pardoned him on arrival. Safarov had served
    eight years of his life sentence for killing an Armenian officer
    during a NATO training in Hungary.

    Armenia immediately broke diplomatic ties with Hungary and said
    releasing Safarov, who was given a hero's welcome on his return,
    was a "grave mistake".

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at odds since the war between ethnic
    Azeris and Armenians that erupted in 1991 over the mainly Armenian
    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. A ceasefire was signed in 1994 but new
    cross-border clashes this year have prompted worries of a resumption
    of fighting.

    Hungary said it acted in compliance with international law and that
    Azerbaijan had promised to uphold Safarov's sentence. While the two
    countries were in talks about developing closer economic ties, these
    were in no way linked to the release of the soldier, it said.

    Azerbaijan dismissed media reports that it planned to buy Hungarian
    bonds, which blogs and newspapers had speculated might have played
    a part in Safarov's release.

    Protesters chanting "We are sorry, Armenia" said they doubted the
    government's motives, adding that whatever the reasons, the decision
    was unacceptable.

    "Murderers should not be extradited to countries where it is clear
    that ethnic hate crimes are considered heroism," said protester Laszlo
    Muhari, 30. "In a democratic country this is not acceptable."

    "(Prime Minister Viktor) Orban should stop lying and start giving
    clear answers, because it is simply impossible that such a brutal
    killer is just released without a background deal."

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