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ISTANBUL: Russia slams Azerbaijan over 'outrageous' Eurovision vote

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  • ISTANBUL: Russia slams Azerbaijan over 'outrageous' Eurovision vote

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    May 21 2013


    Russia slams Azerbaijan over 'outrageous' Eurovision vote scandal

    MOSCOW - Agence France-Presse

    Moscow reacted angrily on Tuesday as its neighbour Azerbaijan admitted
    that its vote at the Eurovision Song Contest awarding "nul points" to
    Russia's song appeared to have been falsified.

    The scandal topped the agenda at a televised briefing between the
    countries' foreign ministers in Moscow, as Azerbaijan's top diplomat
    admitted that the votes submitted for Russia via cell phone had
    somehow been omitted from the final tally.

    Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov read out a list of
    votes submitted by the country's three cell phone providers, all of
    them putting Russia in second place behind Ukraine, which should have
    meant Azerbaijan gave Russia 10 points.

    "Where these votes went, how they disappeared -- this is a question
    for our state television," he said, calling the case a "detective
    mystery." "When our contestant is robbed of 10 points, this does not
    make us happy," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov responded
    gravely.

    Lavrov said the two sides had agreed that Azerbaijan's state
    television must first clarify the details of what happened.

    Then "we will coordinate our joint actions so that this outrageous act
    is not left without response," he said.

    The 10 points from Azerbaijan would not have changed the ranking of
    Russia's contestant, who came in a disappointing fifth place, 17
    points behind Norway's representative. The Eurovision row took
    precedence at the briefing over diplomatic issues such as Azerbaijan's
    territorial dispute with Armenia.

    The scandal emerged on Monday when the director of Azerbaijan's state
    broadcaster of Eurovision, Camil Guliyev, said that both the cell
    phone votes and the professional jury had given Russia high marks, and
    called the tally a matter of "serious concern and surprise." For
    Azerbaijan, it is deeply embarrassing to have handed zero marks to
    Russia, an important neighbour which it is keen to appease despite
    tensions over energy and the long-running Nagorny Karabakh dispute.

    Russia gave its maximum 12 points to Azerbaijan's Eurovision entry,
    which came in second place. Oil-rich Azerbaijan hosted last year's
    Eurovision on a grand scale in Baku with a brand-new sea-front venue
    and city-wide celebrations, although rights activists held protests to
    highlight the persecution of political opponents of President Ilham
    Aliyev.

    May/21/2013




    From: A. Papazian
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