NATO CHIEF PRAISES DEFIANT BAKU
Hurriyet Daily News
Sept 7 2012
Turkey
NATO chief has praised oil-rich Azerbaijan for its closer security
cooperation with the alliance amid heightened regional tensions due to
the pardoning of an Azeri officer who murdered an Armenian counterpart.
"Our ties are developing steadily and positively," Anders Fogh
Rasmussen said after talks with Azeri President İlham Alyiev
on Sept. 7.
The secretary general said Azerbaijan was a "valuable partner for
NATO," adding that both sides had "an opportunity to build a solid,
long-term partnership."
Rasmussen thanked Azerbaijan for its participation in the NATO-led
mission in Afghanistan and conveyed the alliance's appreciation
for the country's additional support given to NATO operations via
over-flight rights and transit lines.
But Aliyev remained defiant over Rasmussen's criticism of the pardoning
of an Azeri officer who axed to death an Armenian serviceman in 2004
during a NATO training seminar in Budapest. "Armenia is unjustifiably
kicking up a fuss over Ramil Safarov's pardoning," Aliyev said,
arguing that the process was legal and fair.
'In line with convention'
"Safarov was extradited in conformity with the European Convention
[on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons] and his pardoning is based on
Azerbaijani legislation," Agence France-Presse quoted him as saying.
Reiterating his concerns over the incident, the NATO chief said, "The
act he committed in 2004 was a crime that should not be glorified,
as this damages trust and does not contribute to the peace process."
Rasmussen made the same statement in the Armenian capital Yerevan on
Sept. 6, where public outrage over the case has sparked large protests.
Touching on the tensions between Baku and Yerevan, Rasmussen said:
"Two things are clear. First, that there is no military solution.
Second, the only way forward is through dialogue, compromise and
cooperation." Yerevan has broken off diplomatic links with Budapest,
which had been assured by Baku that the killer would serve out his
prison term in Azerbaijan.
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said Sept. 6 that "making a hero out
of a criminal is unacceptable" and accused Azerbaijan of endangering
the fragile peace.
September/08/2012
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/nato-chief-praises-defiant-baku-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=29644&NewsCatID=359
Hurriyet Daily News
Sept 7 2012
Turkey
NATO chief has praised oil-rich Azerbaijan for its closer security
cooperation with the alliance amid heightened regional tensions due to
the pardoning of an Azeri officer who murdered an Armenian counterpart.
"Our ties are developing steadily and positively," Anders Fogh
Rasmussen said after talks with Azeri President İlham Alyiev
on Sept. 7.
The secretary general said Azerbaijan was a "valuable partner for
NATO," adding that both sides had "an opportunity to build a solid,
long-term partnership."
Rasmussen thanked Azerbaijan for its participation in the NATO-led
mission in Afghanistan and conveyed the alliance's appreciation
for the country's additional support given to NATO operations via
over-flight rights and transit lines.
But Aliyev remained defiant over Rasmussen's criticism of the pardoning
of an Azeri officer who axed to death an Armenian serviceman in 2004
during a NATO training seminar in Budapest. "Armenia is unjustifiably
kicking up a fuss over Ramil Safarov's pardoning," Aliyev said,
arguing that the process was legal and fair.
'In line with convention'
"Safarov was extradited in conformity with the European Convention
[on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons] and his pardoning is based on
Azerbaijani legislation," Agence France-Presse quoted him as saying.
Reiterating his concerns over the incident, the NATO chief said, "The
act he committed in 2004 was a crime that should not be glorified,
as this damages trust and does not contribute to the peace process."
Rasmussen made the same statement in the Armenian capital Yerevan on
Sept. 6, where public outrage over the case has sparked large protests.
Touching on the tensions between Baku and Yerevan, Rasmussen said:
"Two things are clear. First, that there is no military solution.
Second, the only way forward is through dialogue, compromise and
cooperation." Yerevan has broken off diplomatic links with Budapest,
which had been assured by Baku that the killer would serve out his
prison term in Azerbaijan.
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said Sept. 6 that "making a hero out
of a criminal is unacceptable" and accused Azerbaijan of endangering
the fragile peace.
September/08/2012
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/nato-chief-praises-defiant-baku-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=29644&NewsCatID=359