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Release And Pardon Of Killer Jeopardises Armenia-Azerbaijan Ceasefir

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  • Release And Pardon Of Killer Jeopardises Armenia-Azerbaijan Ceasefir

    RELEASE AND PARDON OF KILLER JEOPARDISES ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN CEASEFIRE

    Wikinews
    http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Release_and_pardon_of_killer_jeopardises_Armenia-Azerbaijan_ceasefire?dpl_id=517748
    Sept 5 2012

    Following Hungary's release and repatriation of convicted Azeri
    axe-murderer, Ramil Safarov, who Azerbaijan subsequently pardoned,
    Armenia announced it is "ready for war".

    The declaration is in-response to Safarov's pardon and promotion,
    despite the Azeri officer having been given a life sentence - with
    a minimum jail term of 30 years, by Hungarian authorities in 2006.

    Safarov was found guilty of the 2004 murder of Armenian officer Gurgen
    Margaryan in Budapest, when both Safarov and Margaryan were attending
    a NATO Partnership for Peace programme. Safarov killed Margaryan in
    his sleep with an axe; the attack allegedly stemming from a desire
    to avenge Azeris killed during the Nagorno-Karabakh War and being
    mocked by Margaryan and another Armenian.

    On his return home, Safarov was met with a hero's welcome, given
    a pardon by president Ilham Aliyev, promoted to the rank of major,
    awarded eight-years of back-pay and given a house. Armenia sees these
    acts, when it was expected that Safarov would serve out his prison
    term in Azerbaijan, as highly provocative.

    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian declared: "We don't want a war,
    but if we have to, we will fight and win. We are not afraid of killers,
    even if they enjoy the protection of the head of state" .

    Historically both Armenia and Azerbaijan lay claim to some of the
    same territories, an issue complicated by the intermingling of ethnic
    populations so some areas have no clearly demarcated Azeri and Armenian
    border; these potential sources of conflict remained quiescent whilst
    both nations were subsumed by greater powers.

    However, the collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires in the wake
    of the First World War led to the Armenian-Azerbaijani War. With the
    demise of the short-lived Armenian-Azerbaijan-Georgia Transcaucasian
    Democratic Federative Republic, fighting broke out which only ended
    when the two nations were annexed by the expanding Soviet Union.

    With the USSR's collapse, Armenia and Azerbaijan re-emerged as
    independent states - as-did old rivalries over territory. Between
    1988 and 1994 over thirty thousand people died, and a million were
    displaced in bitter ethnic fighting between Armenians and Azeris over
    the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh; despite an Organization for Security
    and Co-operation in Europe brokered ceasefire, no final armistice
    has been signed and intermittent violence between them the two states
    continues. Nagorno-Karabakh remains legally part of Azerbaijan, but
    under effective Armenian control. On multiple occasions president
    Ilham Aliyev has stated his willingness to resort to force in order
    to assert Azeri rule, with oil wealth tipping any local arms race in
    favour of Azerbaijan.

    On Friday, The National Security Council of Armenia decided to
    break ties with Hungary during an emergency summit, describing the
    Hungarian actions as a "grave mistake". In turn, the Azeri ambassador
    was summoned by Hungary on Monday regarding the breach of Azeri
    assurances that Safarov would serve out the remainder of his sentence
    in Azerbaijan.

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