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Shahin Rzayev: Murdering An Armenian Makes Him A Hero In Azerbaijan

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  • Shahin Rzayev: Murdering An Armenian Makes Him A Hero In Azerbaijan

    SHAHIN RZAYEV: MURDERING AN ARMENIAN MAKES HIM A HERO IN AZERBAIJAN

    Gulf Today
    http://gulftoday.ae/portal/d4e2241e-a12b-4bf9-a065-90797879950d.aspx
    Sept 13 2012
    UAE

    Hungary's decision to repatriate an Azerbaijani military officer
    convicted of murdering a member of the Armenian military has caused
    outrage in Armenia, worried foreign diplomats and baffled analysts.

    In 2004, Ramil Safarov killed Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan with
    an axe. Both were attending a Nato-run military academy in Hungary
    where they were studying English.

    Convicted in 2006 by a Hungarian court, Safarov was sentenced to life
    imprisonment. On Aug. 31, however, Hungarian officials announced that
    he would be repatriated to Azerbaijan where he would serve out the
    remainder of his sentence.

    Instead, Safarov received the equivalent of a hero's welcome upon
    his return. He was granted a full pardon by President Ilham Aliyev
    when he arrived in Baku and promoted to the rank of major by Defence
    Minister Safar Abiyev, Not only that, he received about $57,000 from
    the military - back pay for the years he had spent in prison.

    Armenia's reaction was explosive. President Serzh Sargsyan immediately
    suspended diplomatic ties with Hungary, accusing the country of
    betraying justice.

    Russia, France and the United States, the three countries that act
    as intermediaries in the long-running Armenian-Azerbaijan stand-off
    over Nagorny Karabakh, expressed disquiet at the decision, saying it
    could endanger the already fragile peace in the region.

    "We are expressing our deep concern to Azerbaijan regarding this action
    and seeking an explanation. We are also seeking further details from
    Hungary regarding the decision to transfer Safarov to Azerbaijan,"
    US State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said. "We condemn any
    action that fuels regional tensions."

    Russian foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said,
    "We believe that these actions by Azerbaijan, as well as those
    of the Hungarian authorities, run counter to efforts agreed to at
    international level ... to reduce tension in the region."

    Azeri officials so far have declined to explain what prompted the
    decision to release Safarov. Defence ministry spokesman Eldar Sabiroglu
    said only that the release was "victory for justice and Azerbaijani
    diplomacy." But the general public in Baku seemed to approve the move,
    whatever its motivation. "I think it's absolutely right that Safarov
    was freed," said Iskander Atazade, a student attending one of the
    numerous celebrations marking the officer's return.

    In Armenia, the reaction was somewhat different. Protesters gathered
    outside the Hungarian embassy, hurling tomatoes and shouting insults.

    Tom de Waal, a veteran observer of the South Caucasus now at the
    Carnegie Endowment in Washington, was baffled as to what might have
    prompted Aliyev to take what he called a "deeply provocative" step.

    "It is a worrying indication of the quality of advice that President
    Ilham Aliyev is receiving from his inner circle," he wrote in a comment
    piece for the BBC. "Over the past few years, the government in Baku has
    spent tens of millions of dollars of its new oil revenues promoting
    the image of Azerbaijan as a new, modernising, dynamic country. The
    effect has been quite successful, with results ranging from Azerbaijan
    joining the UN Security Council to Baku hosting feel-good events such
    as the Eurovision Song Contest.

    "All that PR work now has to contend with a contrary image of the
    government welcoming home an axe-murderer."

    Officials in Hungary have also been reluctant to explain what prompted
    the prisoner transfer.

    But the financially troubled nation has denied allegations that it
    was attempting to curry favor with the Baku regime in order to obtain
    a sizeable loan on favourable financial terms.

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