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Washing Away Hate Crimes with Oil Is not the Only Path to Partnershi

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  • Washing Away Hate Crimes with Oil Is not the Only Path to Partnershi

    Washing Away Hate Crimes with Oil Is not the Only Path to Partnership

    by Simon Maghakyan

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/09/19/washing-away-hate-crimes-with-oil-is-not-the-only-path-to-partnership/
    September 19, 2012


    An unremorseful murderer was predictably pardoned and promoted last
    month after the Azerbaijani government secured military officer Ramil
    Safarov's extradition from Hungary. Safarov had been serving a life
    sentence in that country for axing to death his sleeping Armenian
    colleague Gurgen Margaryan at a 2004 NATO Partnership for Peace
    course.

    While swift to imprison domestic dissidents, the authoritarian regime
    of Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev spared no effort to release
    Safarov-a hero for many fellow Azeris-by reportedly offering Hungary a
    loan as large as $3.8 billion, enabled by the Caspian's energy riches.
    Unrepentantly proud of his success, Aliyev set Safarov's picture as
    his Facebook cover photo. Capitalizing on anti-Armenian sentiment,
    fueled by the 1990's bloody war over Nagorno-Karabagh, is likely
    Aliyev's sole opportunity to connect with a large number of
    Azerbaijani citizens, whose subtlest criticism of the regime can
    otherwise land them behind bars.

    Aliyev's policy of securing short-term populist support, however, is
    clearly poised-if not somewhat intended-to exacerbate the already
    heavily tense relations with Yerevan.
    Aliyev's policy of securing short-term populist support, however, is
    clearly poised-if not somewhat intended-to exacerbate the already
    heavily tense relations with Yerevan, which charges that anti-Armenian
    hatred is Baku's official state policy. Armenia's response that it is
    ready to fight, if attacked, has further demonstrated the serious
    repercussions of the situation, prompting strong reaction against
    Safarov's release from the mediators of the Karabagh conflict, France,
    Russia, and the United States.

    To demonstrate his deep concern, President Obama has `request[ed] an
    explanation' from Hungary, implying that his administration was
    surprised by the extradition. A leaked U.S. diplomatic dispatch
    summarizing reactions to Safarov's April 2006 conviction, however,
    reports that the Azerbaijani `Prosecutor General's office has already
    announced its intention to seek extradition,' attesting to
    Washington's knowledge of the extradition effort from day one.
    Furthermore, a Reuters report published a week before Safarov's
    release noted the possible Azerbaijani loan to Budapest, which should
    have also raised a flag.

    Instead of readily reacting to this potential development with a press
    statement, Washington and its partners should and could have
    proactively prevented the extradition by sending Budapest, whose
    growing cooperation with Baku hasn't been secret, a strong message
    that an extradition would further complicate Nagorno-Karabagh
    negotiations. This willful negligence resonates with Washington's and
    other mediators' failure to halt another anti-Armenian action when, on
    Dec. 15, 2005, they were alerted to the Azerbaijani military's
    destruction of the world's largest medieval Armenian cemetery in
    Djulfa. Instead of demanding that Azerbaijan stop their ongoing
    irreversible destruction of the world's largest complex of medieval
    Armenian material heritage, the State Department kept silent until
    after the cemetery was reduced to dust. In the meantime, it expressed
    internal displeasure, according to a leaked cable, not with the
    heavy-duty destruction, but with Armenia's written protest of it.

    A State Department officer once summarized for me Washington's
    interests in Azerbaijan: `Energy, security, and human rights.' The
    first two-which include oil pipelines and possible attack grounds
    against Iran-have undoubtedly overshadowed the latter, especially in
    the context of the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict, which has already killed
    tens of thousands and displaced many more, the majority of whom are
    Azerbaijanis.

    As a mediator of the conflict, Washington is expected to be neutral.
    But tacitly or negligently allowing state-sponsored hate crimes does
    not qualify as evenhandedness; it merely reinforces the prime cause of
    the Karabagh conflict: the Armenian perception that Azerbaijan has
    been systematically intolerant of everything Armenian without any
    international repercussion.

    Budapest's ill-advised decision to extradite Safarov and subsequent
    hesitancy to strongly criticize the release, as well as Washington's
    inability to proactively prevent the transfer, are seemingly
    byproducts of self-interests. But a government needn't always
    sacrifice its principles to forge a partnership, even with
    authoritarian regimes. When the Armenian inscriptions on a church used
    by minority Udis and nearby tombstones in Nij, Azerbaijan, were
    polished out during a 2005 renovation supported by a Norwegian
    non-profit, Oslo's Ambassador Steinar Gil strongly expressed his
    outrage regarding the vandalism. Moreover, he actively publicized it,
    demanded accountability, and convinced all fellow ambassadors to join
    him in boycotting the reopening of the church. Azerbaijan, whose top
    Muslim cleric called the renovation and reopening `triumph of
    tolerance,' was expectedly unhappy.

    `It is a question of principle,' Gil told me. Yet despite Gil's
    persistent principled position on many human rights issues, Norway has
    continued to be one of the largest investors in Azerbaijan's energy
    sector.

    Washing away hate crimes with oil is not the only path to partnership with Baku.

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