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Pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait (February 1988), Another Genocide Gone Unpunished

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  • Pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait (February 1988), Another Genocide Gone Unpunished

    Ok this isn't about the genocide of 1915, it's about another Armenian massacre gone unpunished committed by Azerbaijanis, the Sumgait genocide. Many Armenians haven't heard about the events that took place in Sumgait (a town by Baku) during the February of 1988, and I want to dedicate this thread to the "Sumgait genocide" and all those innocent Armenians brutally beaten to death and burned just 17 years ago.


    A Genocide Gone Unpunished
    Pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait (February 1988)



    Pogroms, beatings and murder of Armenians in Sumgait, which is a town 30-minutes drive from Baku, took place in broad daylight as passersby kept looking. The crimes committed by Azeri thugs reached their high point on February 27-28. These events were proceeded by a wave of anti-Armenian rallies that shook entire Azerbaijan in February 1988. Almost the entire territory of the city with a population of 250,000 became an arena for unobstructed mass pogroms of its Armenian population. Azeri thugs broke into apartment buildings with prepared in advance lists of Armenian tenants residing there. Azeries were armed with iron rods (armature pieces), hatchets, knives, broken bottles, rocks and gas tanks. The number of these thugs can be determined by a simple fact that according to many witnesses, 50-80 people attacked each apartment. Similar crowds (numbering up to one hundred people each) went on a rampage in the streets.

    Dozens of Armenian were killed (according to verified but incomprehensive data, number of murdered Armenians reached at least 53), majority of whom were set afire alive after being beaten and tortured. Hundreds of innocent people recieved injuries of different severity and became physically impaired. Women, among them minors, were raped. More than two hundred apartments were robbed, dozens of cars were destroyed and burned, dozens of art and crafts studious, shops and kiosks were demolished. Thousands of people became refugees. At best Azeries kept silence, some, calling themselves the intelligencia or the "salt" of Azeri nation, tried to justify what happened. These were Sumgait's true colors, which put the first mark on the long list of crimes against humanity committed by Azerbaijani authorities during the past decade.

    Pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait amounted to genocide organized on the governmental level. In his address to the Supreme Council of the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Region, a leader of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan Mr. Hidayat Orujev, stated days before the massacre of Armenians in Sumgait: "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 same Orujev is currently the State Advisor for Ethnic Policy in Heidar Aliyev's presidential staff.

    This crime was not given its adequate political and legal evaluation. Not only its organizers and primary executors were set free, but also until today their names remained unknown to the world. Despite the fact that everything possible was done to conceal the circumstances of the crime committed in Sumgait and to distort its nature, there are enough documents, witness accounts and other facts that lead to one and only conclusion: the pogroms were organized and executed on high governmental level. Moreover, prime organizers and executors of the crime were the authorities of then Soviet Azerbaijan and certain nationalistic pro-Turkish Mafia circles linked in different ways to Azerbaijani authorities.

    During 18 October-18 November 1988, the Supreme Court of the USSR reviewed one of the eighteen criminal cases filed after the Sumgait atrocities, in which, as the prosecution stated in its conclusion, "hundreds of people of Azeri nationality" participated. During the investigation many witnesses were questioned, the testimony of which stated the unusual cruelty and their organized nature of the crimes. Enraged mobs threw furniture, refrigerators, television sets and beds out of balconies and set them afire. Tenants were dragged from their apartments. If they tried to run and escape, the mob attacked them. The mob used metal rods, knives and hatchets, after which bodies were thrown into the fire. "He was still moving, trying to escape from fire, but five young men were pushing him back into the fire with metal rods" (witness A. Arkhipov). The Internal Ministry troops did nothing. Witness S. Guliyev revealed during the trial how they reacted to pogroms and killings: "A man was being beaten near the windows of a police station. The police gave up the town to dishevel. It was not [present] in town. I did not see it [there]." "The Police knew everything", -- stated witness D. Zarbaliyev, a son of an Internal Ministry major himself.

    Division of one organized crime into separate and independent cases testified to the fact that the trial was biased and had an aim to conceal true organizers and perpetrators of the crime. The court qualified mass murders of Armenians as murders committed by hooligans. Moreover, during the trial, the criminal idleness of local party and soviet structures as well as the military regiments present in the city was not taken into consideration. By February 29 the army troops were in Sumgait. However, they were not defending Armenians, but rather defending themselves from the enraged mob, which was throwing rocks at the army troops.

    Mass rallies, which gathered thousands and where direct calls to kill Armenians and begin with pogroms were made, also allow concluding that tragic events in Sumgait were organized. So does the obvious assistance of Sumgait law enforcement bodies to the mobsters and murderers, and later the involvement of officers of the Azerbaijani Interior Ministry and the KGB in the sabotage of criminal investigations and covering of criminals. The weapons of murder (sharpened armature pieces, spears and knives) were manufactured at Sumgait factories, rocks were delivered to the areas of pogroms in advance, roadblocks were installed on the escape routes from the town, lists of Armenian residents were given to the mobsters, telephones were disconnected by the workers of the local telephone company, electricity was shut off in entire blocks and neighborhoods of the town during the days that the pogroms took place, the mobs were well disciplined and subordinated hierarchically to one another. All of these contradict to the allegations that the crime had a spontaneous nature. It should be noted that immediately after the pogroms, following the orders of the Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers (Prime Minister) of Azerbaijani SSR G. N. Seidov and an Azerbaijani Communist Party's Central Committee official Ganafayev, the belongings of Armenians, which were thrown out of their apartments to the streets, were hastily removed, yards and building entrenches were wash, and mobbed apartments and public buildings were frantically repaired. Seidov headed the government delegation that arrived to Sumgait on March 1, 1988. Thus, the physical evidence of the crimes was destroyed, which noticeably hampered the investigation. The bodies of many victims were later found in the morgues of Baku and other towns near Sumgait. During the May 21, 1988 plenum of the Central Committee of the Azerbaijani Communist Party, the former Secretary of Sumgait Committee of Communist Party D. M. Muslim-Zadeh blamed the authorities of Azerbaijan for the Sumgait tragedy.

    The policy of silence around the genocide committed in Sumgait as well as the permissive attitude of the international community towards the Azeri perpetrators of the Sumgait genocide allowed the organizers and active participants of pogroms to avoid criminal punishment. Thus, the bloody campaign continued and soon embraced the entire territory of Azerbaijani SSR, reaching its high point in January of 1990 in Baku, when hundreds of Armenians fell victim to the pathological hatred of Azeri nationalists. In May, 1988 the Shushi regional Communist Party Committee initiated deportations of Armenians from Shushi. In September 1988, tragic events took place near Kojalu village (Nagorno Karabakh), where several Armenians were wounded and killed and the last Armenian residents were expelled from Shushi. In November-December of the same year, Azerbaijan was swept with a wave of Armenian pogroms. The most brutal of them tool place in Baku, Kirovabad (Gyanja), Shemakha, Shamkhor, Mingechaur and Nakhichevan Soviet Autonomous Republic of Azerbaijan. In Kirovabad, for example, Azeri mobsters burst into a retirement living community, took its residents away to the outskirts of the city and brutally murdered twelve old men and women, of which some were disabled.

    The Sumgait tragedy and its bloody repetitions in Azerbaijan in 1988-1991, led to the disappearance of a 450,000-strong Armenian community of Azerbaijan and the military aggression against the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh in 1992-1994. Although this has been commonly perceived as the main and only reason for pogroms, the roots of this tragedy are to be found not only in the unique mentality of the Azeris as a people, which, allegedly, could not do otherwise but to answer with pogroms and murders to Karabakh Armenian's peaceful demands for self-determination. Certainly, psychological and historic motives, which determined the social climate in Azerbaijan, are very important in order to understand why all of a sudden thousands of people grabbed hatchets and started killing their harmless neighbors.

  • #2
    Khojalu 1

    Yet another article exposing the real perpetrators of Khojali massacre.

    The Truth about Khojalu Events
    ( Azeri Sources Testify)


    An anti-Armenian campaign has been hysterically raging in Azerbaijan throughout the nine years following the Khojalu events the official Baku. The purpose of the campaign is to falsify the facts and bring discredit on Armenia in the eyes of the international community. The Khojalu events when peaceful people died were exclusively the result of the political intrigues and struggle for power in Azerbaijan. The real reasons lying behind these events are more convincingly reflected in the testimonies of the Azeris themselves, both the participants, eyewitnesses of the events and those who knew the ins and outs in Baku.
    According to M. Safaroghli, an Azerbaijani journalist, "Khojalu was located in an important strategic position. Losing control over Khojalu would mean a political fiasco for Moutalibov". (Newspaper "Nezavisimaya Gazeta" ("Independent Newspaper", February, 1993).
    Along with Shushi and Aghdam, Khojalu was one of the key bases from where Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno Karabagh was continuously bombed during the winter months.
    The population of NKR which was in the danger of the total physical extinction by Azerbaijan could survive only by neutralizing the weapon emplacements of Khojalu and de-blocking the airport. Hundreds of peaceful people were killed in Stepanakert as the result of the daily bombing from the adjacent Khojalu. The military operation of the armed forced of NKR on the neutralization of the weapon emplacements of Khojalu was not a surprise for Azerbaijan. For the first time the Azeri side was notified about the forthcoming attack by TV nearly two months prior to the operation. Arif Yunusov, a well-known champion of human rights in Azerbiajan wrote about that in "Izvestia". The officials in Baku did not try to hide their awareness, including Ayaz Moutalibov, the president of Azerbaijan. He emphasized that "… the offense on Khojalu was not a surprise".("Ogoniok" Magazine, N 14-15, 1992) As the result of these warnings the majority of the peaceful people of Khojalu moved to safe zones.
    The detachments of NKR did everything possible in order to exclude the death of the peaceful population of the settlement and left a corridor for the safe evacuation of the peaceful population from the zone of military actions. The Azeri side was timely informed about the opened corridor which allowed to evacuate the people of Khojalu.
    Elman Mamedov, the mayor of Khojalu: "We knew that the corridor was left for the exit of the peaceful people" ("Russkaya Misl" 03.03.1992, citation from "Bakinskie Rabochiy" newspaper).
    After the operation was over 11 bodies of Azeris were found by the rescue group "Artsakh" in the village and its neighboring areas, naturally, counting out the bodies of the members of the armed formations dressed in uniforms (their number was also small). The insignificant number of the peaceful victims of Khojalu in the view of the intense military actions undertaken for the purpose of holding control over the settlement evidenced that the Armenian side had taken all measures on ensuring the maximal possible security of the people of the village. Nevertheless, there is no doubt that a significant number of the peaceful population of Khojalu became victims of the operation.
    How many of the people of Khojalu were killed and where?
    The Azeri side is categorically silent about the place of the death of hundreds of residents of the village. The truth is that all of them were coolly assassinated at the distance of 11 km from Khojalu, about 2-3 km far from Aghdam which at that time used to be the regional military base of the Azeri armed forces. This mere fact is enough for casting light on the intricate story about the massive extinction of the residents of Khojalu. It is hard to understand why should the Armenians let the population of Khojalu flee from the besieged village in order to kill them on the approaches of Aghdam putting their lives at risk (at that time Aghdam was under the control of the Azeris).
    In his interview to "Nezavisimaya Gazeta" Moutalibov stated that "however, the Armenians had left a corridor for the escape of the people. Why a fire should have opened then? (cf.: "Nezavisimaya Gazeta", April 2, 1992) He linked the fact of the criminal fusillade of the peaceful people with the attempts of the opposition to remove him from power, laying the responsibility for the tragedy entirely on him.
    In his interview to "Novoye Vremia" ("New Time") Magazine Moutalibov confirmed his statement which was made nine days before: "It was evident that the some people had organized the shooting for shifting the power in Azerbaijan" (cf.: "Novoye Vremia" , March 6, 2001) .
    Similar statements and assessments of the Khojalu events were made by several other Azerbaijani top official and journalists.
    R. Gajiyev, member of the Operating Committee of Aghdam Branch of NFA (National Front of Azerbaijan): We could have helped the people of Khojalu because we had the resources and means. However, the authorities of the republic wanted to demonstarte to the people of Azerbaijan that they are not able to do so and ask for the assistance of the CIS Army and with the help of the latter also neutralize the opposition" (Moscow, "Izvestia", April, 1992).
    The Azeri journalist Arif Yunosov's view is slightly different from the statements given above. According to Yunusov, "The town itself and its population are willingfully sacrificed for the political purposes, i.e., prevent the National Front of Azerbaijan from coming to power" (cf.: "Zerkalo" ("Mirror") Newspaper, July, 1992.) Again, it follows that the Azeris themselves are the perpetrators of the tragedy.
    The Khojalu events are the result of the treachery of the high-level Azeri authorities towards the people of Khojalu whereas the Azeri propaganda blew up the story about the "brutalities of the Armenians", and the dreadful pictures of the site covered with defiled bodies were demonstrated by TV. It was propagated that Khojalu was the retaliation of the Armenians for Sumgayit.
    Tamerlan Karayev, the former Chairman of the Supreme Council of Azerbaijan testifies: "The tragedy was perpetrated by the Azeri authorities", in particular, "some of the top officials" (cf.: "Moukhtalifat" Newspaper, April 28, 1992).
    Yana Mazalova, a Czech journalist, who, because of the oversight of the Azeris, was included in both of the groups of journalists who visited the place of the events on the first day and several days later, noticed the stunning difference how the bodies looked at the first and second site visits. before and after between the previous and latest outer look of the bodies. When Mazalova visited the site immediately after the events she saw that the bodies did not bear any traces of brutality whereas a couple of days later the bodies "adulterated" by the Armenians and "ready" for the cameras were demonstrated to the journalists.

    Who killed the peaceful people of Khojalu and later defiled their bodies, if the tragedy took place not in the village liberated by the Armenians, and not along the direction of the humanitarian corridor, but on the close approaches of Aghdam town, a territory which was entirely under the control of the National Front of Azerbaijan? Chingiz Moustafayev (Fuat-oghli), an independent Azeri TV journalist and cameraman who filmed the aftereffect on February 28 and March 2, 1992, doubted the official version of Azerbaijan and initiated his own investigation. His life was the price for his very first report to the Moscow News Agency "DR-Press" about the possible involvement of the Azeri side in the crime: he was killed not far from Aghdam, and the details of the murder still remain unrevealed. Moustafayev reported about the flight to Khojalu. He noted that he could not film the dead bodies there, because "there was not a single killed person there …". In the course of the first flight the journalists shot only a couple of dozens of bodies of the Azeri soldiers which were found not far from the village of Nakhichevanik. However, most of the bodies were near Aghdam where they were video-filmed on February 29 and later on March 2. These tapes were displayed at the session of Milli Medjlis and, later, numerous TV channels of the world as an evidence of the massive manslaughter of the Azeri population of Khojalu. The first flight of the helicopter with the Azeri journalists on board took place on February 29, 1992. It is noteworthy that the journalists who were informed about the massive offense of the Azeris in Khojalu flew directly to the place of the events. However, they did not find any evidence of the happenings and flew back. During the second flight to the region of the massive slaughter, on March 2, 1992, the journalists noticed that the positions of the dead bodies lying on the ground and the level of the injuries and physical impairment was astonishingly different as compared to the first inspection. Chingiz Moustafayev (Fuat-oghli) informed the Azeri president A. Moutalibov about the changed positions of the bodies and their physical impairment. Undoubtedly, by that time the Azeri president understood the reasons which caused the falsification of the tragedy. Moutalibov gave a really prophetic answer to the journalist, "Chingiz, don't tell anyone that you think something is wrong because they'll kill you". Chingiz Moutafayev was killed in the same field where he had shot the main Azeri "argument".
    The present president of Azerbaijan Geydar Aliyev personally admitted that the "former leadership of Azerbaijan was also at fault of the Khojalu events". As early as in April of 1992 the following was articulated by him, "The bloodshed will do good to us. We shouldn't interfere in the course of events" (cf.: Bilik-Duniasi News Agency). It is out of question who gained from the "bloodshed". Megapolis-Express wrote: "It is impossible not to admit that if the National Front of Azerbaijan in fact had defined far-reaching goals, it succeeded in addressing them. Moutalibov is compromised and forced out of his post, the international community is in shock, the Azeris and their brotherly Turks believed in the so-called "genocide of the Azerbaijani people in Khojalu"("Megapolis-Express", N17, 1992).
    The Azeri mass media was silent in its comments on the Khojalu events about another tragic detail which was revealed later: 47 Armenians were held hostage in the "peaceful" Khojalu since February 26. After the liberation of Khojalu only 13 of these hostages were found in the settlement (including 6 women and 1 child), the remaining 34 were taken away by the Azeris in the unknown direction. All that is known about these hostages is that at the night of the operation they were driven away from the place of imprisonment, but not from the settlement. There is no information about their further status as hostages. It is obvious that the bodies of the Armenian hostages were tormented beyond the degree when they could be identified. This was done in order to create the illusion that the bodies of the victims "had been defiled" by the Armenians. This is the reason why the bodies of the wretched victims were outraged to the extent that it was impossible to identify the victims.
    As a matter of fact, around 700 inhabitants of Khojalu, including Turks - Meskhets who for whatever reasons failed to use the free corridor for retreat were passed to the Azerbaijani side without any conditions. After the thorough investigation the fact of the unconditional return of the residents of Khojalu to Azerbaijan was confirmed in the conclusion of the Human Rights Watch Center "Memorial" (Moscow), as well as in the documentary film of Svetlana Kulchitskaya, a journalist from St. Petersburg.
    It follows from the above-described facts that the blame for the death of the peaceful people of Khojalu and those Armenians who had been taken hostage in the village lies on the Azeris. The Azerbaijani side committed a crime against its own people, and the motivation lies in the political intrigues and lust for power.
    Four things denialist Turks do when they are confronted with facts:

    I. They change the subject [SIZE="1"](e.g. they copy/paste tons of garbage to divert attention).[/SIZE]
    II. They project [SIZE="1"](e.g. they replace "Turk" with "Armenian" and vice versa and they regurgitate Armenian history).[/SIZE]
    III. They offend [SIZE="1"](e.g. they cuss, threaten and/or mock).[/SIZE]
    IV. They shut up and say nothing.

    [URL="http://b.imagehost.org/download/0689/azerbaijan-real-fake-absurd.pdf"][COLOR="Red"]A country named Azerbaijan north of the Arax River [B]NEVER[/B] existed before 1918[/COLOR][/URL]

    Comment


    • #3
      Just out of curiosity what does Hellektors post have to do with hatred? You hate that people uncover truth... I can say for one - as an Armenian, I do not hate you because you are Turk.

      Comment


      • #4
        Unhappy Anniversary: January 13 marks 16 years since Baku pogroms

        By Suren Musayelyan
        ArmeniaNow reporter

        Today, January 13, marks the 16th anniversary of the start of pogroms of Armenians in Baku, Azerbaijan, with hundreds of families in Armenia and elsewhere in the world remembering their relatives who became the victims of the weeklong massacre.



        For many of the survivors, like 72-year-old Emma Savadyan, those events are still fresh in their memories and every year on January 13 they relive the horrors of what was later called the ‘Black January’.

        Emma was in her native Baku on that ill-starred day in 1990 together with her husband Shmavon when Azeris broke into their home, brutally beat them, and began to loot their property.

        “We lost everything, but we were lucky to survive. Our neighbor, who worked for the KGB, saved us from the raging crowd,” remembers Emma, who now lives with her brother in Stavropol, Russia.

        Like most of other Baku Armenians left in the city Emma and her husband were deported to Krasnovodsk on a ferry and then brought to Armenia on a plane. Both Emma and Shmavon were wearing pajamas and were in slippers…

        Now 16 years after the tragedy she is still coming to terms with what happened.

        “My husband Shmavon would have been 80 years old now. But he did not live long after the fear he had experienced in Baku,” says Emma, who buried her husband in Armenia.

        Shmavon died less than a year after the couple fled to Armenia. Emma says that the fear of a mob attack and the difficult journey on a ferry to Krasnovodsk and then to Armenia made him too weak to live.

        “Doctors said he had died of a bad heart, but I know that he had died of the fear he had inside him and the loss of everything he had earned in his life,” says Emma.

        The last and most fierce pogroms began in Baku in 1990 and continued for a whole week until Soviet troops were introduced into the city to stop the atrocities. Dozens of Armenians were murdered between January 13 and 20, others were robbed of their property and deported, many were brutally beaten or crippled.

        According to some data, there had been some 30,000 Armenians left in the Azeri capital by the time the first pogroms began. Most of them were adults or elderly people, as a majority of families had already managed to transport their children to Armenia or elsewhere and returned to the hostile city to deal with their left property.

        When the cleansing ended the city that once was home to nearly a 200,000-strong Armenian community was left with no Armenian population, except a few hundred Armenians in mixed marriages.

        “The Armenian pogroms in Baku became a manifestation of Azerbaijan’s policy of terrorism aimed at frightening the people of Nagorno-Karabakh then fighting for its independence and making it give up its struggle for self-determination,” says historian Mher Harutyunyan.

        The scholar says that the number of people killed during the pogroms in fact exceeds the officially announced death toll several times. “There is much evidence about atrocities and murders committed with exceptional cruelty in Baku then,” Harutyunyan says.

        Armenian writer and publicist Zory Balayan, who was on the crest of the wave of Nagorno-Karabakh’s liberation struggle in the late 1980s and in the 90s, writes in his article devoted to the Baku massacres:

        “Saturday, 13 January, 1990 was chosen for a reason. During those years all provocations against the Armenian population were planned on Fridays or Saturdays. There was a weekend ahead and it meant that the Kremlin would be unreachable. Everybody was at their dachas. That was the case with Sumgait, Kirovabad, Getashen, Stepanakert and Baku, as well as with dozens of other towns and villages.”

        Remarkably, the Soviet press was silent on the unfolding tragedy in Baku until January 16 when Moscow newspapers published a vague two-line report about ‘hooliganism’ in the capital of Soviet Azerbaijan.
        Attached Files
        "All truth passes through three stages:
        First, it is ridiculed;
        Second, it is violently opposed; and
        Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

        Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by tateos
          why this hatred cant we get along it seems to me armenia is gaining hatred not love by this campaighn it is getting famous though.
          We may be able to get along someday as neighbors and that's fine. As long as there is a seperation.
          General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

          Comment


          • #6
            CNN World Report: Sumgait Massacre

            ANCHOR:

            Armenians around the world are calling for legal proceedings against the
            instigators and perpetrators of the Armenian pogroms in Sumgait and Baku.
            They say that those responsible for a wave of crimes against humanity were
            released after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Armenia TV's Paul
            Chaderjian reports.

            REPORTER:

            Thousands gathered in Yerevan to protest the anti-Armenian hysteria being
            promoted by officials in the Republic of Azerbaijan. At the center of
            Azerbaijan's malice is a border dispute with Armenia over a sliver of land
            where Armenians have lived for centuries.

            The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan can be traced back to Joseph
            Stalin, who in an attempt to control the ethnic communities in the Soviet
            Empire, placed the centuries-old Armenian region of Mountainous or Nagorno
            Kharapagh under Azeri rule.

            In reaction to talks of Armenian autonomy in Kharapagh, Azeris attacked
            Armenians with the approval and support of local authorities.

            What resulted were massacres of native Azerbaijanis of Armenian decent.
            Hundreds were killed, tortured, burnt alive, stabbed with crude and barbaric
            weapons, children were held over the open flames of stoves. More than 300
            thousand Armenians were forced to flee Azerbaijan, but the world didn't take
            notice.

            STAND UP: Rally organizers say the Sumgait massacres were never fully
            acknowledged and addressed by Soviet authorities. Further, they say, those
            who orchestrated and carried out these brutal and barbaric attacks were
            never punished by the courts.

            It took the Red Army three days to march into Sumgait and put a stop to the
            violence, but violence broke out in other Azerbaijani cities and forced
            Armenians in Kharapagh to defend themselves.

            For 18 years now, Armenia's government has been trying to find a diplomatic
            solution to the Armenian Republic of Nagorno Kharapagh's referendum to break
            away from Azerbaijan and be part of Armenia. As recent as a few weeks ago,
            another meeting between the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan, failed to
            achieve any results.

            Adding insult to injury, an Azerbaijani political party awarded its man of
            the year award to an Azeri solider who hacked to death and decapitated an
            Armenian officer attending a NATO peace conference in Hungary.

            Armenians are asking Azerbaijanis to stop the desecration, destruction and
            vandalism of ancient Armenian holy sites, cross stones and cemeteries.

            For the CNN World Report, Paul Chaderjian, Armenia TV

            # #

            Following is the rundown for this weekend's CNN World Report, scheduled to
            air on Saturday, March 11 and Sunday, March 12:

            - Africa, Europe, & the Middle East:

            Saturday:
            06:30A CET/12:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            15:30P CET/09:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            05:30A CET/11:30P Eastern Time- Program A

            Sunday:
            05:30A CET/11:30P Eastern Time - Program A


            - Latin America:

            Saturday:
            02:30A Buenos Aires/12:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            11:30A Buenos Aires/09:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            01:30A Buenos Aires (Sunday)/11:30P Eastern Time (Saturday) - Program A

            Sunday:
            01:30A Buenos Aires (Monday)/11:30P (Sunday) Eastern Time - Program A


            - East & South Asia:

            Saturday:
            13:30P HK, 11:00A New Delhi/12:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            12:30P HK, 10:00A New Delhi (Sunday)/11:30P Eastern Time (Saturday) -
            Program A

            Sunday:
            12:30P HK, 10:00 New Delhi (Monday)/11:30P Eastern Time (Sunday) - Program A

            - North America & The US:

            Saturday:
            06:30A CET/12:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            15:30P CET/09:30A Eastern Time - Program A
            05:30A CET (Sunday)/11:30P Eastern Time (Saturday) - Program A

            Sunday:
            05:30 CET (Monday)/11:30P Eastern Time (Sunday) - Program A
            "All truth passes through three stages:
            First, it is ridiculed;
            Second, it is violently opposed; and
            Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

            Comment


            • #7
              Cnn Reminded The World About The Anti-armenian Policy Of Azerbiajan

              YEREVAN, MARCH 11. ARMINFO. Today the CNN channel reminded the world
              public about the events of Sumgayit, 1988, and the 'heroic' deed of
              Ramil Safarov, who in February 2004 assassinated with an axe sleeping
              Gurgen Margarian. The topic was prepared for CNN by the 'Armnenia' TV
              channel, which has been cooperating with CNN during the recent years.

              Gagik Mkrtchian, chief executive of 'Armenia-TV', informed that CNN
              broadcaster an episode of the last demonstration in Yerevan, as well
              as shots from the mass murder of 1988 and the national liberation
              movement. The CNN let the world to see barbarian destruction of
              Armenian cemetery in Nakhijevan. 'We were able to show the world the
              results of anti-Armenian propaganda of Baku, its cynicism, barbarism
              and national-religious intolerance,' said Mr. Mkrtchian.
              "All truth passes through three stages:
              First, it is ridiculed;
              Second, it is violently opposed; and
              Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

              Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

              Comment


              • #8
                Mourning march to Tsitsernakaberd

                01.03.2007 12:49

                YEREVAN (YERKIR) - On the occasion of the Sumgait massacres anniversary, a mourning march was organized to Tsitsernakaberd today. For two years this anniversary has been marked on the state level. Two years ago, at the initiative of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun parliamentary faction, February 28 was declared the Day of Commemoration of the crimes against Armenians in Azerbaijan.

                Participants of today’s march initiated by the ARF Supreme Body laid flowers and wreaths at the khachkar to the victims of Sumgait massacres.

                The speakers mainly emphasized the idea that such anniversaries should have the meaning of remembrance rather than mourning. “Today’s false propaganda of Azerbaijan is the continuation of the aggression the roots of which go further into history,” the participants of the march underlined.

                According to representative of ARF Dashnaktsutyun, Chairman of the NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations Armen Rustamyan, it is important that there exist documentaries proving the Sumgait events in case of making complete use of which it will become clear to the public that the Armenian side is speaking on the basis of facts through correct presentation of events, counter to the fact that Azerbaijan is trying to distort these in every possible way.



                Todays News
                General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                Comment


                • #9
                  Issue #9 (228), March 02, 2007
                  (March 02, 2007)
                  Remembering Sumgait: Chronicle of a pogrom
                  By Aris Ghazinyan
                  ArmeniaNow reporter
                  On February 26, 1988, Mikhail Gorbachev, the Secretary General of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), the future first and last president of the Soviet Union, addressed a statement to the peoples of Azerbaijan and Armenia.
                  {ai203901.jpg|left}In the statement, Gorbachev promised to study carefully the problem of Nagorno-Karabakh and to devote a special Central Committee plenum to the issue of the development of interethnic relations. His address ended with an appeal: “The time has come for reason and sensible decisions.”

                  Banners held up at rallies in Yerevan’s Opera Square in those days carried slogans such as “Lenin, the Party, Gorbachev!”. They believed in the triumph of reason and in the logic of sensible decisions, and, therefore, having heard Gorbachev’s appeal, the demonstrators went home.

                  A new word entered the dictionary of Armenia’s history the following day – Sumgait. It marked the beginning of the chronicle of the bloody Azeri-Armenian confrontation.

                  People also began to gather in that town, built after World War II and considered one of the industrial centers of Azerbaijan. The gatherings began on February 26 in front of the Party’s committee building in Lenin Square.

                  On February 27, after Gorbachev’s address, the crowd gathered again. This time banners at the “rally” called for the killing and expulsion of Armenians from Sumgait.

                  There were speeches at the rally too. Rocks, axes, homemade spears made of reinforced steel appeared. Groups of Azerbaijanis high on hashish were already setting cars on fire and breaking into Armenians’ apartments to claim the first victims.

                  This was the start of three days of pogroms against Armenians.

                  The first reports of disturbances in Sumgait reached the CPSU’s Central Committee later the same day. Gorbachev was told that people had been killed and law enforcement bodies were claiming to be helpless to prevent the violence.

                  On February 28, hundreds of residents of Sumgait who had participated in the pogroms gathered again in the central square as if nothing had happened. The rally was led personally by the first secretary of Sumgait’s party committee, a former leader of Azerbaijan’s Komsomol organization.

                  More reports reached the Kremlin. At least 20 people killed. The pogroms were gaining a mob characteristic. Gorbachev issued orders to central bodies to intervene and troops were sent onto the streets of Sumgait.

                  Moscow began an investigation into the pogroms. It established that steel bars had been produced in a planned manner at Sumgait’s tube-rolling mill in January and that hashish had been distributed in the town for free on the day the violence started.

                  It was also established that lists of Armenians had been drawn up at the housing and communal services centers of Sumgait a week before the pogroms. Many Azerbaijanis had been warned in advance not to switch on their lights on the night of February 27-28 to make it easier to identify the apartments where Armenians lived.

                  It was established that on February 28 and 29, many telephones in the town were disconnected. The Moscow News wrote that one Armenian apartment defended itself for seven hours while being unable to summon help from any quarter.

                  It was becoming apparent that much in the Sumgait tragedy had been planned. Later, the secretary of the CPSU’s Central Committee Alexander Yakovlev would accuse the KGB of involvement in the events.

                  {ai203902.jpg|right}The Soviet leadership, disregarding all the evidence, categorically refused to describe the mass killings in Sumgait as driven by ethnic and religious hatred.

                  Criminal proceedings began at Sumgait’s people’s court on October 12, 1988, against three men charged with the organization of “mass disturbances”. One of the men stated in his testimony: “The pogrom organizers had dragged an Armenian towards the pump station. We also headed there and I found an axe while we were going there. We approached a crowd who were beating an Armenian near the pump box, and I hit him with the axe on the forehead. At that time Ali Agayarov found a steel bar somewhere and delivered three blows to his head. Then I dropped the axe and left.”

                  The chairman of Armenia’s Chamber of Lawyers, Ruben Sahakyan, participated in the Sumgait (1988) and Baku (1990) court trials.

                  “The absurdity of the situation is that after the breakup of the USSR and the establishment of independent Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Sumgait case was dismissed,” he says.

                  “It is not only the Soviet Union, but also the OSCE, the Hague Tribunal, the European Court and the EU who have failed to condemn Sumgait. I have 13 volumes from the Sumgait case. I recommend representatives of these organizations to read through each of the hundreds of episodes in these volumes.

                  “After that, I think these organizations will think better than to suggest that our refugees return to places where they would be threatened with an axe every night.”

                  The lawyer thinks that the murder of the Armenian army officer Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest, Hungary, in 2004, is undoubtedly part of the Sumgait file, but not limited to it. The axe was commonly used as a criminal weapon in 1896, in 1905, and 1915-1922. At the close of the 20th Century, Azerbaijanis used it in Sumgait, Baku, Kirovabad, Shamkhor, Mingechaur and other Armenian-populated territories.

                  “The axe of Budapest fits well into this historical context,” Sahakyan contends.

                  It is enough to give just one example to imagine the full horror of Sumgait. On February 29, a group of thugs beat and humiliated the Melkumyan family before pouring petrol over them and burning alive the father, 57-year-old Soghomon, mother, 54-year-old Raisa, their sons Igor, 31, and Eduard, 28, and daughter Irina, aged 26.

                  The charred body of Irina Melkumyan was beheaded.
                  General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Maragha Massacre Photos ( warning, graphic..)

                    Baroness Caroline Cox has described Azeri atrocities in Maraga village in her book entitled «Ethnic cleansing continues». In particular, Cox waxes indignant over the fact that Azeris make high-sounding statements and appeal to various international organizations on the occasion of the events in khojalu, where in her words, everything was not so unambiguous, while the Armenians having at their disposal incontestable proofs of the atrocities present them to the international community insufficiently actively. The Maraga tragedy is viewed as one of the most horrible examples of genocide and is considered by the Karabakh side among Azerbaijan's bloody crimes in Getashen, Martunashen, Buzluh, Erkej and other settlements in the north of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic at the time of aggression in 1991-1992.


                    Comment

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