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  • Budapest: For Money, What Else? - The Baku Opposition Says That It I

    FOR MONEY, WHAT ELSE? - THE BAKU OPPOSITION SAYS THAT IT IS A PITY THAT HE IS CONSIDERED A HERO, BUT THE HUNGARIAN VERDICT WAS TOO SEVERE

    Nepszabadsag
    Sept 4 2012
    Hungary

    Interview with Sardar Calaloglu, chairman of the Azerbaijan Democratic
    Party

    [Translated from Hungarian]

    Sardar Calaloglu, head of the non-parliamentary Azerbaijan Democratic
    Party (ADP), has told this daily that "Ramil Safarov's return home and
    his reception may become a spark in explosive Azerbaijani-Armenian
    relations." In the opposition politician's view, it is unfortunate
    that the officer, who was convicted for murdering an Armenian fellow
    student in Budapest, was welcomed in a ceremony after his transfer
    and it was especially sad that the Azerbaijani leadership presents the
    extradition approved by Budapest as a success in foreign policy and a
    "victory over Armenia."

    "Ilham Aliyev [Azerbaijani president] needs this more than a year
    before the presidential election because he cannot achieve any
    genuine result in the Nagorno-Karabakh matter," said Calaloglu, who
    was arrested several times for his opposition activities. He also
    added that the Hungarian court's decision to sentence Safarov to life
    imprisonment had been excessive. "It did not consider the fact that
    he had come from an area that was still occupied by Armenians these
    days and that the victim had mocked him and Azerbaijan. In such a
    situation, the perpetrator would receive 15 years' imprisonment in
    our country. Safarov served more than half of his sentence; therefore,
    the presidential pardon was neither illegal nor unworthy. It did not
    mean that we did not consider murder a crime; instead, it meant that
    the court had not considered all circumstances when it handed out its
    verdict," Calaloglu explained; he also added that Armenia had also
    handed down lenient punishments for the murder of Azerbaijanis. He
    pointed out that Yerevan was criticizing Safarov's release on a
    national basis, not on a legal one.

    Calaloglu said that it was impossible that Budapest had not expected
    an amnesty for Safarov. "They sent [diplomatic] notes only because of
    international reactions, but the developments could not have caught
    Hungarian politicians by surprise," the 58-year-old politician, who
    graduated from medical school, said. He also said that the Hungarian
    step could be explained easily: "It did it for money, what else?

    Hungary faced the same situation as Greece, but Azerbaijan had
    substantial revenues from natural gas and crude oil. I, of course,
    did not know whether the purchase of bonds would actually take place."

    He said that Azerbaijan was an important partner for the outside
    world because of its strategic location and raw material reserves, so
    nobody raised serious objections against the country's anti-democratic
    regime. Calaloglu explained the country's international reputation as
    follows: "Despite the fact that human rights were not guaranteed and
    the regime was corrupt and dictatorial, Azerbaijan was a key player
    in the region." The politician, who was not allowed to run in the 2008
    elections, said that "we were a pseudo-democracy and this was the most
    dangerous thing." (Finally, six opposition candidates ran and secured
    a total of 11 per cent [of the votes] against Aliyev's 89 per cent.)
    The ADP chairman also went on to say that "they could not convene and
    appear on television. The regime was a criminal gang and democratic
    regulations were not implemented in practice. We were prisoners and
    it was an achievement that our party existed at all."

    [Translated from Hungarian]

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