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`The Hill': In 2005 Azerbaijan committed cultural genocide in Jugha

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  • `The Hill': In 2005 Azerbaijan committed cultural genocide in Jugha

    ``The Hill'':In 2005 Azerbaijan committed cultural genocide against
    thousands of Armenian religious monuments in Jugha

    14:10 02/02/2013 » REGION


    Aliev's regime embarked on a Taliban-style cultural genocide in 2005
    against thousands of medieval Armenian religious monuments in Jugha,
    Nackichevan. This has been well-documented by video footage,
    photographs and advanced satellite imaging, scientist of Oxford
    University Harout Semerdjian says in the article in `The Hill's'
    Congress Block responding to the note of the Azerbaijani journalist
    Emil Agazade residing in London.

    Mr. Semerdjian writes that in his article Agazade `passes all limits
    of journalistic ethics and crosses into the boundary of hate and
    ignorance.'

    `Instead of attempting to give Congress a counter-lesson on history
    and geopolitics, I would highly suggest that Emil Agazade first help
    put his own house in order. Transparency International consistently
    ranks Azerbaijan among the most corrupt countries of the world, and
    its president Ilham Aliyev was recently named the `world's most
    corrupt leader' by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting
    Project,' the scientist writes.

    The article also says that the journalists in Azerbaijan continue to
    suffer from violence and threats, and pro-democracy activists have
    been beaten and imprisoned in recent years and the European Parliament
    has explicitly condemned Azerbaijan for `increasing number of
    incidents of harassment, attacks and violence against civil society
    and social network activists and journalists in Azerbaijan,' the
    report says.

    The author also notes that the International diplomats have been
    repeatedly banned by Azerbaijani authorities from visiting Jugha,
    including past and present U.S. Ambassadors to Azerbaijan, Matthew
    Bryza and Richard Morningstar. `While the petro-dollars of the Aliyev
    regime fund lobbyists such as Emil Agazade to monitor the global media
    and attempt to suppress freedom of information, it would be much wiser
    for Azerbaijan's leadership to spend the money at home, where over 40
    percent of the rural population live below the poverty line,' Harout
    Semerdjian writes.


    Source: Panorama.am

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