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Azerbaijan police break up protest against abuse in army

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  • Azerbaijan police break up protest against abuse in army

    Azerbaijan police break up protest against abuse in army

    Reuters
    March 10, 2013

    By Lada Evgrashina | Reuters

    BAKU (Reuters) - Police in Azerbaijan arrested dozens of protesters
    who rallied against violence in the military on Sunday, firing water
    cannon and rubber bullets to disperse crowds.

    The protest was one of a series triggered by the death of a conscript,
    Jeyhun Gubadov, on January 7 at a military barracks. His death added
    to a string of other non-combat deaths under murky circumstances in
    the military in recent years.

    The Defence Ministry said initially Gubadov had died of a heart
    attack, but his family believed he was beaten to death and four
    soldiers were arrested after an investigation was opened.

    About 500 people, mostly young opposition activists, gathered in the
    capital Baku shouting "No to deaths in the army", some holding
    portraits of dead soldiers.

    Baton-wielding police were swift to crack down on the unsanctioned
    demonstration. Within minutes they had fired smoke bombs into the
    crowd and begun detaining protesters.

    "I can't be indifferent to the fact that young soldiers die in our
    army almost every week," said a protester named Gulshan, who held up
    three photographs of dead soldiers.

    Western governments and human rights groups accuse Azerbaijan's
    President Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded his father in 2003, of rigging
    elections and of clamping down on dissent. Protests are often swiftly
    broken up by security forces.

    Buoyed by oil wealth, Azerbaijan has increased military spending to
    demonstrate its military power to its neighbor and arch foe
    Armenia. Two countries are locked in a dispute over the region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But experts say the army is in desperate need of reforms to combat low
    moral and the chronic bullying of conscripts by their superiors.

    Some 77 Azeri soldiers died last year in non-combat related deaths,
    including suicides and shootings, according to local watchdog group,
    the "Doctrine" Journalists' Military Research Centre.


    (Writing by Margarita Antidze; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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