Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NY Times: A hero's eelcome for a convicted killer reignites tensions

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NY Times: A hero's eelcome for a convicted killer reignites tensions

    NY TIMES: A HERO'S EELCOME FOR A CONVICTED KILLER REIGNITES TENSIONS

    tert.am
    05.09.12

    By Ellen Barry

    Ramil Safarov stepped uncertainly off the plane in his native
    Azerbaijan last Friday, returning home after spending eight years in a
    Hungarian prison for a gruesome murder. But it took only a few minutes
    for the celebrations to begin. There was a pardon, a new apartment,
    eight years of back pay, a promotion to the rank of major and the
    status of a national hero.

    Mr Safarov, 35, was already famous because of his crime. Eight years
    ago, carrying an ax, he crept into a dormitory room in Hungary where
    an Armenian serviceman, a fellow student in a NATO-sponsored English
    class, slept, and nearly decapitated him.

    But now Mr Safarov will almost certainly go down in history for
    the way he was freed, an episode people have started to call "The
    Safarov Affair."

    The backlash has embarrassed Hungary, which agreed to extradite Mr
    Safarov on the assumption that he would serve at least 25 years of
    a life sentence. It has set off protests in Budapest and enraged
    Armenia, where activists pelted the Hungarian Embassy with eggs and
    burned Hungarian flags.

    And it threatens to end the lengthy peace process that has kept
    Azerbaijan and Armenia from sliding back into bloody conflict over
    the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. Mr. Safarov, who was a
    boy during the war with Armenia, embodies the hatred that has pooled
    deeply in the public as leaders have sat through rounds of faltering
    negotiations.

    "If we have no process, what's left is a vacuum, which gets filled
    with an escalation toward war; we'll see how the Armenian side reacts,
    but that's my fear," said Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus specialist at
    the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. "It's
    suddenly more dangerous."

    Mr Safarov, then a lieutenant, and his victim, Lt. Gurgen Markarian,
    got to know each other in Budapest as members of an English-language
    course organized by NATO's Partnership for Peace, which was developed
    to build ties with former Soviet allies in Eastern Europe.

    Mr Safarov told the police that his Armenian classmates had insulted
    him and that he had grown increasingly angry, finally buying an ax and
    waiting until before dawn one day to carry out his plan. He passed
    those hours by finishing his English homework and taking a bath,
    according to a transcript of the interview published by Armenian
    activists.

    After Mr Safarov was arrested, Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry released
    a statement describing his family's losses during the war with Armenia,
    and suggesting that Lieutenant Markarian had goaded him.

    "There are indications that the Armenian servicemen repeatedly insulted
    the honor and dignity of the Azerbaijani officer and citizen,"
    the statement said. "All this would have inevitably influenced the
    suspect's emotional state."

    Oil-rich Azerbaijan carried out a sustained lobbying effort to
    extradite Mr. Safarov from Hungary, over the protests of Armenian
    officials. The Hungarian government, under pressure to explain its
    decision to turn over Mr. Safarov, has said it received written
    assurance from Azerbaijan that he would not be paroled until he had
    served 25 years in Lieutenant Markarian's murder.

    On Friday, though, he was pardoned by Azerbaijan's president, Illham
    H. Aliyev. Mr. Safarov's presence so electrified citizens that all
    day strangers congratulated one another on the streets of Baku.

    It is not clear how the Armenian government will respond to Mr.

    Safarov's release. "The Armenians must not be underestimated,"
    President Serzh Sargsyan warned on Sunday. "We don't want a war, but
    if we have to, we will fight and win," he said. "We are not afraid
    of murderers, even those who enjoy the highest patronage."

    Richard Giragosian, an analyst based in Yerevan, Armenia, said that
    he doubted that either side was seeking a war, but that unfolding
    events risked "a war by accident."

    An Armenian opposition party on Tuesday proposed formally recognizing
    Nagorno-Karabakh as independent - a step that would signal the final
    collapse of peace talks that have long been encouraged by Russia
    and the West. Armenia could ratchet up the confrontation by opening
    an airport in Stepanakert, the capital of the disputed territory,
    or by responding overwhelmingly to cease-fire violations.

    "Each side is escalating," Mr. Giragosian said. "It's almost like a
    matter of physics. For every action there is a reaction."

    Mr. Aliyev, Azerbaijan's president, has invested vast sums in his
    country's international standing, most recently serving as host of
    the Eurovision Song Contest, but waves of condemnation have emerged
    since Friday - most swiftly from the United States, which issued
    statements saying officials in Washington were "extremely troubled"
    and "deeply concerned." On Monday, Russia's Foreign Ministry expressed
    "deep concern, noting the case's "extreme atrocity."

    Zerdusht Alizadeh, an opposition politician and analyst at the Helsinki
    Citizens' Assembly, said Mr. Aliyev was looking ahead to elections
    next year, and had little to show for the drawn-out efforts to mediate
    the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. Mr. Safarov's homecoming, he said,
    was a far simpler way to declare victory.

    "Giving so much support to a hero - a person who killed an Armenian -
    makes the president a hero, too," he said.

    By Tuesday, though, the backlash was dominating the day's news
    coverage, and Mr. Safarov had made no further public appearances.

    The episode, Mr. Giragosian said, was a reminder of the depth and
    force of the ethnic grievances left behind as the Soviet empire
    receded across Europe.

    "It's almost like the Balkans was - we had no idea of the barbarity
    of these people," he said. "Holding a grudge for 100 years is nothing.

    It's like a blood vendetta. At the same time, there are wider
    implications; it increases an already worrisome trend toward possible
    renewed conflict here."

Working...
X