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Armenian pogroms in Baku: The NYT - Indifference and silence can cau

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  • Armenian pogroms in Baku: The NYT - Indifference and silence can cau

    Armenian pogroms in Baku: The New York Times - Indifference and
    silence can cause another genocide

    12:20 17/01/2015 >> REGION


    It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures
    and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

    The New York Times, July 27, 1990.
    blishing the series of evidences of the eyewitness, statements of
    political and public figures about the Armenian pogroms held in Baku
    on 13-20 January 1990. The articles are posted on the website of
    KarabakhRecords.info
    Indifference and silence can cause another genocide...

    An open letter to international public opinion on anti-Armenia pogroms
    in the Soviet Union

    It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures
    and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

    The New York Times, July 27, 1990.

    An era which we all thought ended, the era of pogroms, has resurfaced.
    Once again this year, the Armenian community of Azerbaijan has been
    the victim of atrocious and intolerable premeditated massacres.

    As scholars, writers, scientists, political leaders and artists we
    wish, first of all, to express our profound indignation over such
    barbaric acts, which we wanted to believe belonged to humanity's past.
    We intend this statement as more than an after-the-fact condemnation.
    We want to alert international public opinion to the continuing danger
    that racism represents to the future of humanity. It forebodes ill
    that we are experiencing the same powerlessness when faced with such
    flagrant violations of human rights a half century after the genocide
    of the Jewish people in Nazi concentration camps and forty years after
    the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It would be inexcusable if,
    because of our silence now, we contributed to the suffering of new
    victims.

    The situation of Armenians in the Caucasus is, in fact, too serious
    for us to remain silent. There are moments when we must assume the
    moral obligation to assist a people in peril. Our sense of obligation
    leads us today to appeal to the international community and to public
    opinion.

    More than two years ago, active persecution against Armenians began in
    Azerbaijan. The pogroms of Sumgait in February 1988 were followed by
    massacres in Kirovabad and Baku in November 1988. As recently as
    January 1990, the pogroms continued in Baku and other parts of
    Azerbaijan. The mere fact that these pogroms were repeated and the
    fact that they followed the same pattern, leads us to think that these
    tragic events are no accidents or spontaneous outbursts.

    Rather we are compelled to recognize that the crimes against the
    Armenian minority have become consistent practice - if not consistent
    policy - in Soviet Azerbaijan. According, to the late Andrei Sakharov
    (New York Times, November 26, 1988), these pogroms constitute "a real
    threat of extermination" to the indigenous Armenian community in
    Azerbaijan and in the autonomous region of Mountainous Karabakh, whose
    inhabitants are 80 percent Armenian.

    Horror has no limits, especially when we remember that the threat is
    against the Armenian people, who in 1915 paid dearly for their right
    to be different in the Ottoman Empire. There, Armenians lost half
    their population to genocide, the worst consequence of racism.
    Furthermore, if the recent pogroms have revived nightmares of
    extermination not yet overcome, the current total blockade of Armenia
    and Mountainous Karabakh and 85 percent of those into Armenia pass
    through Azerbaijan; it would not be an exaggeration to maintain that
    such a blockade amounts to the strangulation of Armenia. In a land
    devastated by the earthquake of December 7, 1988, the blockade has
    paralyzed the economy and dealt a mortal blow to the reconstruction
    efforts.

    It is our sincere hope that perestroika will succeed. But we also hope
    for the success of glasnost and democratization. We recognize that the
    passage from a totalitarian state to a rule of law cannot be achieved
    overnight. It is nonetheless necessary that in the process of
    transition, the government of the Soviet Union promote legalize and
    institutionalize such critical forces for democracy as human rights,
    the principle of toleration, and democratic movements. There is no
    better defense and demonstration of democracy. At any rate, that is
    the only way to avoid the worst. In the case of the multinational
    state, the, worst may mean threats to the right of a people or a
    minority to exist. It is during periods of transition and uncertainty
    that rights of peoples - today Armenians, tomorrow another people or
    minority - are threatened or denied. In this respect, the ease with
    which we see today the development in the USSR of racist movements,
    especially the anti-Semitic movement known as Paymat, is for us cause
    for grave concern.

    In the name of our duty of vigilance, we demand that Soviet
    authorities as well as the international community condemn univocally
    these anti-Armenian pogroms and that they denounce especially the
    racist ideology which has been used by the perpetrators of these
    crimes as justification.

    We ask from the Soviet authorities and the international community
    that all necessary measures be taken immediately to ensure the
    protection and security of Armenians in the Caucasus and other parts
    of the Soviet Union. This can begin by bringing about a definitive
    lifting of the Azerbaijani blockade. It should be clear that the
    forceful deportation of Armenians is not the solution to the problem
    of Mountainous Karabakh which, in essence, is a problem of human
    rights.

    The international community of states under the rule of law must prove
    the authenticity of its commitment to human rights in order to ensure
    that, due to indifference and silence bordering on complicity, another
    genocide does not occur.

    It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures
    and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

    The New York Times, July 27, 1990.

    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2015/01/17/baku-1990-nytimes/


    From: Baghdasarian
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