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AAA: Azerbaijani authorities try to divert attention from Sumgait

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  • AAA: Azerbaijani authorities try to divert attention from Sumgait

    AAA: Azerbaijani authorities try to divert attention from anniversary
    of Sumgait events by its hostile agitating campaign

    13:53 16/02/2013 » SOCIETY


    On the eve of the anniversary of Sumgait pogroms, Armenian Assembly
    of America (AAA) issued a statement in which was said that Azerbaijani
    government is trying to divert attention from the anniversary of the
    Sumgait events by its hostile agitating campaign.

    `The Azeri government, which has been spreading a virulent
    disinformation campaign agitating for war by condoning the slaying of
    Armenians, as with the pardon of the murderer Ramil Safarov who axed
    to death an Armenian officer in his sleep at a NATO Partnership for
    Peace training exercise in Hungary, and ramping up tensions along the
    ceasefire line, is aiming to distract attention from the upcoming 25th
    anniversary of the atrocities that mark the beginning of the pogroms
    against Armenians in Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh,' the statement
    says.

    Twenty-five years ago, in the Azerbaijani town of Sumgait (Sumgayit),
    longtime Armenian residents were brutally targeted on the basis of
    their ethnicity and subjected to unspeakable crimes. According to a
    March 1988 article in The Economist, "reports of atrocities, including
    the murder and mutilation of pregnant Armenian women and newborn
    babies in a maternity hospital, have not been denied. Other reports
    speak of gangs of young Azerbaijanis hunting down Armenian families
    and committing murder, rape and robbery." The Azeri government never
    saw to the punishment of the perpetrators, the AAA states.

    The Assembly mentions that February 28, 2013, marks the 25th
    anniversary of the pogroms committed by the Azerbaijani authorities
    against its Armenian population and the beginning of the escalation of
    violence against the Armenian minority across the entire country of
    Azerbaijan and against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh, culminating in
    the violent expulsion of 200,000 Armenians from the Azeri capital city
    of Baku in January 1990.

    `Despite the Azeri government's assertion that the violence was due to
    spontaneous riots, the pogroms in Sumgait, Kirovabad (now Ganja),
    Baku, and elsewhere, were a retaliatory attempt to silence and thwart
    the rights of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh who lawfully
    approached their government on the basis of a new openness in Soviet
    society ushered in by President Gorbachev's policy of glasnost and
    perestroika,' the statement says.

    It says that, instead of respecting the legal rights of Armenians,
    Azeri mobs targeted Armenians as a group and subjected them to gross
    human rights violations reminiscent of practices and policies
    resulting in the attempted annihilation of the Armenian population in
    neighboring Ottoman Turkey earlier in the century.

    `The Sumgait pogrom was widely reported and roundly condemned, but the
    violence was never contained. Increasingly anti-Armenian forces acted
    with impunity and the pogroms spread across Azerbaijan leading to the
    military campaigns of the late 1980s to 1994 to deport the Armenians
    of Nagorno Karabakh until a ceasefire agreement was signed by
    Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh, and Armenia,' the Assembly reminds.

    The statement notes that Hidayat Orujev, a leader of the Communist
    Party of Azerbaijan, days before the massacre of Armenians in Sumgait,
    stated in an address to the governing Council of the Nagorno Karabakh
    Autonomous Region: "If you do not stop campaigning for the unification
    of Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia, if you don't sober up, 100,000
    Azeris from neighboring districts will break into your houses, torch
    your apartments, rape your women, and kill your children."
    The Organization says that Mr. Orujev was appointed State Advisor for
    Ethnic Policy by the late President Heydar Aliyev of Azerbaijan and
    head of Azerbaijan's State Committee for Religious Affairs by current
    President Ilham Aliyev.

    `The Sumgait pogroms are a reminder of the need to respect the ethnic
    and cultural identity of all people without discrimination and
    violence,' concluded the Assembly in its report.

    Source: Panorama.am

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