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  • "Q'Turan":Professor Of University In Azerbaijan Tells Students How H

    "Q'TURAN":PROFESSOR OF UNIVERSITY IN AZERBAIJAN TELLS STUDENTS HOW HE WOULD STRANGLE EVEN A SMALL ARMENIAN CHILD

    Lecturer at the university in Azerbaijan described to his students
    with great rapture for several times and in bright colors how he
    would with his bare hands without regret strangle even a small
    Armenian child, recalls the author of the article in the site of
    Azerbaijani information agency Turan.

    The abovementioned professor was lecturing the theory of radio
    journalism and simultaneously was working on "AZTV radio." At the
    beginning of each lecture, the professor asked the students which
    stories were the most important for Azerbaijan that week. "God
    forbid if someone mentioned any crucial thing about the authorities,
    the red eyes would turn purple, and the veins would stand out now not
    only on his nose, but all over the face and neck. This professor had
    one "iron argument" for all criticisms "how can you criticize our
    President, when we have such a problem for the whole country in the
    face of Armenians, you should focus on this," the article reads.

    The author notes that today even the laziest person in Azerbaijan
    reads "Stone Dreams" written by Ekrem Eylisli. "Though, it's
    wrong to say it in that way. Even the laziest people discuss and
    condemn the "Stone Dreams". It's from the series like "I have not
    read Pasternak, but I condemn him," the article says.

    Discussion of the book reached the Azerbaijani Parliament. "Members
    of the Parliament apparently discussed all the problems in the
    country, and the only issue left to discuss was the genetic code of
    Ekrem Eylisli. Earlier, the Azerbaijani "patriots" staged a protest
    under the windows of Eylisli's apartment," the author says.

    "Both the activists and the MPs unanimously called Eylisli an
    Armenian, anti-Azerbaijani element, etc. protesting against the book
    which allegedly is about Armenians and Azerbaijanis," the article
    reads.

    The author notes that, the agenda of the social protests in the
    regions of Azerbaijan dramatically changed into verbal lynching of
    Eylisli and sophisticated discussions about his relations with the
    Armenians. "Turning the subject over the Armenians, as soon as
    things get tough, is not a new policy for our government. For
    example, only a few days ago pro-governmental TV channels, while
    discussing the famous accusatory investigative journalist Khadija
    Ismayilova, told that her mother was Armenian. They touch Armenian
    subject at every trifle so that citizens screamed, steamed, get
    annoyed with the Armenians," the author writes.

    "It's amazing how the lessons of history of other people and our own
    do not teach us anything. How long can we blame the Armenians and
    like a child with a new toy carry the idea that we have suffered,
    that they have tortured us in the past and what a pain it is for our
    people (and please do not bring an example of an analogy of the
    Armenian genocide, now I am talking about us, not about them),
    forgetting the fact what Aliyev's government is doing to us right
    now, today, every day. Is it not a rather moral than physical
    humiliation for our people and its destruction?" the author sums
    up. 

     http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/02/04/az-lecturer/

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