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Azerbaijan writer targeted over `pro-Armenia' book

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  • Azerbaijan writer targeted over `pro-Armenia' book

    Daily Times, Pakistan
    Feb 18 2013

    Azerbaijan writer targeted over `pro-Armenia' book


    BAKU: A prominent Azerbaijani writer has become the target of a
    state-approved campaign of intimidation after he published a novella
    he says was intended to build bridges with arch-foe Armenia.

    Akram Aylisli's `Stone Dreams', which depicts relations between ethnic
    Azerbaijanis and Armenians in Azerbaijan, sparked outrage in
    Azerbaijan for what critics say is a pro-Armenian presentation of the
    bloody conflict between the ex-Soviet neighbours.

    The novella's December publication in the Russian-language magazine,
    Friendship of Peoples, has been followed by a hostile campaign of
    intimidation against its author. The most extreme phase of Aylisli's
    nightmare started when the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan party demanded on
    January 31 that the 75-year-old writer repudiate his book and
    apologise before the nation. `The Azerbaijani people must express
    public hatred' towards Aylisli, a high-ranking presidency official
    said.

    Days later crowds started regularly gathering outside Aylisli's home,
    burning his effigies and shouting: `Akram leave the country now!' and
    `Shame on you!'

    At its February 1 plenary, Azerbaijan's parliament condemned the book,
    with some lawmakers saying Aylisli should take a DNA test to prove his
    ethnicity.

    With a stroke of a presidential pen, Azerbaijan's strongman leader
    Ilham Aliyev this month stripped Aylisli of his honorary title of
    `People's Writer', his medals and a presidential pension.

    Aylisli said his wife and son were forced to resign from their jobs.
    Televised auto-da-fes of the writer's books are being held across the
    country.

    The pro-government Yeni Musavat party leader, Hafiz Gadjiyev, has
    publicly pledged a $12,000 reward to anyone who would cut off
    Aylisli's ear.

    `The Azerbaijani authorities have an obligation to protect Akram
    Aylisli,' Human Rights Watch said in a statement last week. `Instead,
    they have led the effort to intimidate him, putting him at risk with a
    campaign of vicious smears and hostile rhetoric.' `Stone Dreams'
    describes violence against ethnic Armenians in Azerbaijan in the 1920s
    and in the late 20th century, when Baku and Yerevan went to war over
    Azerbaijan's now Armenian-controlled enclave of Nagorny Karabakh.

    Critics accuse Aylisli of only describing the sufferings of the
    Armenians and ignoring atrocities committed by the Armenians against
    his own people. `Aylisli's work moves us away from the day of
    reconciliation; an one-sidedly written work can't help settling the
    conflict,' said opposition Musavat party leader Isa Gambar.

    But in an interview with AFP, Aylisli said his book is `a hand of
    friendship, stretched out to the Armenians'. `I tell a story of an
    Azerbaijani, who becomes a victim while saving an Armenian. It's all
    about high moral values and human qualities,' he said, rejecting
    accusations of being unpatriotic. afp

    http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page13%5C02%5C18%5Cstory_18-2-2013_pg14_6

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