Krikor Amirzayan
Azerbaijan attacks the Gülen movement
Azerbaijan seems to join the campaign by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan against a religious movement led by Imam Muslim residing in the United States Fethullah Gülen.
Erdogan said that members of the Gülen movement intend to bring down his government, and during the last year, he led a crackdown where all barred against the alleged members Gülenistes. On April 8, Erdogan told members of his ruling Justice and Development he had discussed this motion with Azerbaijani officials during a visit to Baku in April and was given a list of Azerbaijanis considered supporters Gülen. Azerbaijan is the closest regional ally of Turkey.
For several years, the Azerbaijani government has tried to restrict the activities of Islamist groups, but, until recently, had made no public action against supporters of Gülen. These people – called nurçular referring to Sunni theologian Said Nursi 20th century, which inspired the education initiatives Gülen – do not carry the same weight in Azerbaijani society as they have in Turkey. But over the past two weeks, there were several indicators that Baku changed its position.
Representatives of the Gülen movement deny the allegations Erdogan of having engaged in anti-state activity – but nervousness against groups critical of government is strong in Azerbaijan. In recent weeks, rampant speculation on social networks and pro-government media in Baku focused on the fact that members of the Azerbaijani government could sympathize with the Gülen movement. A suspected sympathizer Gülen, spokesman of the Presidential Administration Elnur Aslanov was fired on March 17.
The Azerbaijani government has not commented on the information. But without doubt, the events speak for themselves already.
In early March, Khalik Mammadov, Vice-President of the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR) has announced that the energy company managed by the government took over management of 11 secondary schools in Turkish 13 centers of exam preparation universities and the private University of Baku-based Caucasus, all run by a Turkish company called educational CAG Öğrətim (Age Education).
Since 2011 SOCAR launched a network of schools in the alleged purpose is to improve the educational standards of Azerbaijan. CAG Öğrətim, now known as the International Centre for Education in Baku, Azerbaijan works since 1992 and has enjoyed a reputation for producing students disciplined sensitive to Islamic ethics and able to enter universities leading in the world.
CAG Öğrətim never acknowledged a link with the Gülen movement, but most education specialists from Azerbaijan and policy experts saw its facilities within the school network in 140 countries of the Gülen movement. Öğrətim AG is part of the International Association of Manufacturers and Entrepreneurs of Turkey and Azerbaijan, a group that contains many Turkish companies that uphold principles of Gülen.
Representatives of SOCAR did not elaborate on the interest of the conglomerate in schools but CAG Öğrətim Caucasus University was acquired last year and some observers see a link with suspicions of Turkey on the Gülen movement. “I think for the Azerbaijani authorities, the idea is definitely that” we can control more effectively if we manage, “commented specialist Bayram Balci Turkey to Paris, who worked in Baku for the French Institute of Anatolian Studies (IFEA).
In March, in a move seen as an attempt to target the finances of Gülen, Turkey closed private schools associated with Gülen who, like during Araz CAG Öğrətim, prepare students for university entrance exams. Erdoğan called on other countries to follow this example.
Balci explained that the Turkish government has probably called the “fraternal” Azerbaijan, a country which shares linguistic and cultural ties with Turkey, “pay attention” to these schools. “For the Azerbaijani government, it is a good opportunity to show Ankara Baku is always in solidarity with Ankara.”
SOCAR partner of Turkey longtime seems a natural candidate for any exercise. The spokesman for the company could not be reached for comment. Similarly, CAG Öğrətim has not responded to requests for interviews on the transition to SOCAR. The rector of the University of Caucasus Sanic Ahmet told EurasiaNet.org he prefers not to discuss the question “for a while.” Even if there was no pressure from Ankara, Azerbaijani leaders seem to have reason to be wary of schools and centers of exam preparation CAG Öğrətim. Outside Baku, schools exist in key regional centers such as population Ganja, Lankaran and Sumgait and more distant locations. This presence in the regions is a potential source of concern to the Azerbaijani government, which has faced large-scale regional events in recent years some observers believe.
“As former students of these schools, as elsewhere in the world, they have their own community. In Azerbaijan, where political parties and other institutions have been weakened, their network [school] … is more distinguished, “said Altay Goyushov, a professor of Islamic history at the State University of Baku. “This is what the Azerbaijani government does not like: The competition.”
Yet Erestin Orujlu, director of the research center East-West of Baku, says some officials use what happens against this movement in Azerbaijan simply to “weaken the position of the other.”
Aside Aslanov a published list of alleged Gülenistes Azerbaijan has also updated the names of Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov, the head of the State Committee for Work with Religious Organizations Elshad Iskenderov and ironically Mammadov of SOCAR.
As Aslanov, who now works at the Ministry of Communications, the Ministry of Defence denied the allegations about the alleged affiliation of Defence Minister Hasanov with the Gülen movement. Other persons named above have not commented publicly.
For some Azerbaijanis, silence is not a surprise. The allegations are “fabricated” accused Orujlu. “The Azerbaijani government does not face any threat of nurcu movement.”
Editor’s Note:
Shahla Sultanova is a freelance journalist focusing on Azerbaijan.
Eurasianet.org
Stéphane © armenews.com
Tensions between the Council of Europe and Azerbaijan
Strasbourg, May 22, 2014 (AFP) – New tensions emerged between the Council of Europe and Azerbaijan on Thursday, after the cancellation of a visa issued to a French Socialist MP René Rouquet.
Azerbaijan yet exercised since mid-May the rotating presidency for six months, the executive body of the European organization uniting 47 countries, the “Committee of Ministers” Foreign Affairs.
“Following the decision of the official Baku to cancel at the last minute visa issued” Mr. Rouquet, member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), thus preventing him from attending PACE meetings scheduled for Thursday and Friday in Baku, the Bureau of the Assembly decided retaliation.
“The Assembly committees not hold meetings in Azerbaijan from 1 June for a period of two years,” except for election observation missions, according to a statement. Mr. Rouquet is Vice President of PACE, and president of the French delegation to the meeting, which has 318 parliamentarians from member countries.
The PACE Bureau invoked the “violation of the General Agreement and the Paris Protocol on the Privileges and Immunities of the Council of Europe, which enshrines the dual principle of irresponsibility and parliamentary inviolability and that of free movement “of its members.
States of the Council of Europe must respect “their commitments regarding freedom of movement of members of the Assembly on official mission, particularly with regard to visas,” he has said.
The measure “may be waived if the authorities (Baku) guarantee freedom of movement of members of PACE in Azerbaijan when traveling on behalf of the Assembly,” he has said.
Also Thursday, the European Court of Human Rights, judicial arm of the Council of Europe, ruled that Azerbaijan had violated the fundamental rights to have wanted to silence the opponent Ilgar Mammadov, was recently sentenced to seven years prison.
Visit to Baku, the Secretary General of the pan-European organization, Thorbjorn Jagland, called for the release of Mr. Mammadov. The Council of Europe was established in 1949 and joined in the 1990s by almost all the former communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe, is responsible for the promotion of human rights, democracy and the rule of law.
Azerbaijan, one of the last countries to have joined in 2001, is regularly criticized for violations of these principles.
Jagland had already said “worried” last week reports that two French journalists following the official visit of President François Hollande in this country had their equipment confiscated before being deported.
Ara © armenews.com
ANCA: Azerbaijan’s Aliyev full of irrational hatred against Armenians
The Executive Director of Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) issued an open letter to all Armenians and Armenia’s friends. Aram Hamparian’s letter slams Azerbaijan’s unceasing military rhetoric and President Aliyev’s threats.
““Our main enemies are the Armenians of the world!” That’s not Talaat Pasha or Abdul Hamid talking. And these words aren’t from 1915. They were recently spoken by Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev. Baku’s oil-rich autocrat who openly lays claim to Yerevan, pardons anti-Armenian axe-killers, and, with his Turkish partners, is striving to isolate Armenia and destroy Artsakh. He’s angry, full of irrational hatred against each and every Armenian around the world. We haven’t seen a world leader demonize an entire ethnicity like this since Nazi Germany.
And it’s not just talk. He’s backed up his threats with tens of millions of lobbying dollars. With fatal cross-border attacks, sniper fire, and a vast multi-billion dollar arms build-up. Aliyev spends more on arms every year than Armenia’s entire state budget. Scary as it may be, it’s time we took Aliyev at his word. With his allies in Ankara, he’s out to finish the work of 1915. He’s announced his motive, has the opportunity, and is buying the weapons,” the letter said.
“So, what stands in his way? Well, first and foremost, the brave young men who stand guard, night and day, along the frontiers of Armenian freedom. These soldiers are true heroes. And behind these courageous defense forces (and their families) are the rest of us. You and me and the 7 out of 10 Armenians who live outside our homeland. We’re the Second Army of the Armenian nation—in many ways, our homeland’s first line of defense. But, like any army, we need our people’s support—the resources, financial and otherwise—to sustain and strengthen our advocacy.
We are not called upon to make the sacrifices of soldiers, who put their lives on the line every day. But, make no mistake, the stakes for Armenia are just as high. Armenians worldwide, inspired by the Hai Tahd movement, truly play a vital role in protecting our homeland and promoting our rights.
Today our activism is more crucial than ever. Our nation is calling to us, as she has so often before. Recall the words of our great poet Yeghishe Charents: “Oh! Armenian People, Your Salvation Lies Only in Your Collective Power.”
Charents was right then, and his wise words still echo in our hearts. In this timeless spirit of common service to our greater cause, let us, as proud sons and daughters of a united nation, rally to the call of our homeland,” the letter said.
“None of us can do everything, but each of us should do something. And a great place to start is by being part of ANCA Telethon 2014. This is, very simply, the devotion we owe to our past. The determination we owe to our future. And the sacred debt we owe to ourselves. With your enduring faith and continued support, we can fight on all the fronts of the Armenian Cause:
Securing Armenian Genocide recognition and reparations; strengthening Armenia, creating jobs, reversing out-migration, fighting corruption, fostering democracy, growing the U.S.-Armenia economic relationship, and building Homeland-Diaspora consensus and cooperation around our shared national ideals; defending and supporting the status and security of the independent Republic of Nagorno Karabagh, pushing back against Azerbaijani aggression, and fighting the growing power of anti-Armenian lobbies here in America; maintaining Armenian identity and culture in our diaspora, by engaging and inspiring our youth and encouraging civic activism, and by protecting our communities in the Middle East by ensuring the delivery of international humanitarian relief to our at-risk communities,” Hamparian concluded.
The conflict between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan
The conflict between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan broke out as result of the ethnic cleansing launched by the Azeri authorities in the final years of the Soviet Union. The Karabakh War was fought from 1991 (when the Nagorno Karabakh Republic was proclaimed) to 1994 (when a ceasefire was sealed by Armenia, NKR and Azerbaijan). Most of Nagorno Karabakh and a security zone consisting of 7 regions are now under control of NKR defense army. Armenia and Azerbaijan are holding peace talks mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group up till now.
Azerbaijani military makes infiltration attempt – Karabakh MOD
May 22, 2014 | 10:48
STEPANKERT. – In the early morning hours on Thursday, Azerbaijan launched an intelligence-diversionary infiltration attempt in the southerly direction of the Line of Contact between the Karabakh-Azerbaijani opposing forces.
The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) Defense Army vanguard units, however, took retaliatory actions and drove the adversary back to its starting positions, the NKR MOD press service informed.
According to preliminary data, the Azerbaijani side had at least three injured.
The NKR Defense Army vanguard units continue to confidently carry out their military task along the Line of Contact.
Armenian villager dies after his captivity in Azerbaijan
Mamikon Khojoyan, a resident of 77 years of an Armenian village border, died yesterday more than two months after his return from captivity in Azerbaijan with serious sequelae.
Khojoyan visited Azerbaijan on January 2 in unclear circumstances. He lived in the town Verin Karmiraghbyur in Tavush region, north of Armenia. He was then arrested by the Azerbaijani villagers and handed over to military authorities.
The Baku authorities said later that Khojoyan was part of an Armenian commando trying to perform a cross-border incursion. Armenian military authorities have denied the allegations, saying he was mentally ill and had strayed into Azerbaijan by accident.
The old man was released and repatriated to Armenia with the help of the International Committee of the Red Cross on March 4. He was immediately hospitalized. An RFE / RL that has been allowed to visit the hospital found injuries all over his body. The doctors suggested he had been wounded in detention. The Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan has denied any torture.
Khojoyan has undergone further processing before returning to Yerevan Verin Karmiraghbyur last month. According Kamo Chobanian, the village mayor, his health deteriorated sharply there is a week. “The torture suffered in captivity had its effects,” he said.
A few days after the release of Khojoyan, another resident of Verin Karmiraghbyur crossed the border and was detained in similar circumstances. Aged 23 years, Arsen Khojoyan was released a month later. He assured reporters he was not mistreated in detention.
Rouben Galichian on how Azerbaijan falsifies history
Panorama.am presents an interview with Rouben Galichian, the author of “The Invention of History” and a number of other cartographic and historical books in which he has exposed the historical falsifications of Azerbaijanis. Galichian speaks about the falsifications of history currently practiced by Azerbaijani scholars who publish books against Armenia and present a falsified version of history to the world.
False theses commonly promoted by Azerbaijani revisionist historians
The overall goal the Azerbaijanis pursue by falsifying history is to “prove” that the Azerbaijanis inhabited the region before the Armenians – a claim which blatantly contradicts the internationally accepted historical facts. In his books Galichian cites original, international and Azerbaijani historical sources as well as ancient maps that run contrary to these assertions. Here are a number of examples of these theses.
• The Azerbaijani scholars claim that the Armenians never lived in the South Caucasus and that they were supposedly brought there by the Russians in 1828
However, there is a bulk of internationally recognized literature that contradicts this. All the travellers who travelled to that area from the 11th and 12th centuries until the 19th century, among them Iranian and Arab travellers, write about the Armenians, Armenian towns, villages and Armenian churches in the area. Among the original sources that prove the Armenians were indigenous people in the area Galichian cites not only European and Greco-roman historians but also historians who lived in Baku, Azerbaijan and who were raised there (among them for instance Bakikhanov, the founder of Azerbaijani history).
• They claim that Azerbaijan has had an independent government for 2000 years.
However, Galichian reminds that Azerbaijan as a country was born in 1918 and that in old maps drawn by any cartographer there is no Azerbaijan North of the Arax River. There existed the Iranian province of Azerbaijan for 2000 years, which was always a part of Iran and its population were Arians and until the 16th century they spoke Pahlavi Iranian dialect and not Turkish. Prior to 1918 in all the international maps the area North of the Arax River was called Caucasian Albania (Arran in Arabic, Aghvank in Armenian) and Armenia was portrayed on both sides of the Arax River (North and South). In 1918 when that area gained independence the Musavat ruling party chose the name of the neighbouring Iranian province Azerbaijan as a name for the new country.
“So until 1918 there were three countries there – Azerbaijan (the Iranian province), Arran, which is today occupied by Azerbaijan, and Armenia. Not only Arab and Islamic cartographers but also Western cartographers and geographers mention this all the time until 1918”, – says Galichian.
There is also the issue of the language in this regard – Turkish language was brought from the Central Asia and it was imposed on the local population, however, the first written text in the Turkish language appeared towards the end of the 19th century. “They claim to be a country with two thousand years of independent history and governance. Then how come they don’t have a written language?” – asks Galichian.
• The Azeris claim that their forefathers were the Caucasian Albanians living in the region (who were Christians and then converted to Islam). They thereby claim that all the historical monuments and churches in the area were built by their forefather Albanians and not by Armenians and thus conclude that they all belong to the Azerbaijanis.
First of all, the Albanians as such did not exist as one unitary people – according to Strabo there were 26 tribes in the area of Albania and a number of these tribes exist till today. However, even if we assume that Caucasian Albanians were one people, then there is a key question that remains unanswered – “the Albanians converted to Islam in the 9th and the 10th century the latest and there was only a small population of non-Muslims living there; but our churches in the area date from the 10th to 17th-18th century; so did the Muslim Albanians build those churches? Who built them?”- asks Galichian. Thus there is a contradiction in terms.
• According to another version that aims to justify the existence of Azeris in this geographical area, the forefathers of Azerbaijanis were Oghuz Turks. Furthermore, they claim that the Oghuz Turks originated in Central Asia and moved to Caucasus five thousand years ago (and not five hundred years ago) and therefore they were supposedly local people living in the Caucasus.
“This is a complete lie, everybody knows when the Turkish tribes started moving in – the 7th -8th century, and massively they moved in during the 8th and 9th century and until the 14th-15th century they were not organized as one nation”, – says Galichian.
Thus the Azerbaijani scholars are not consistent and often contradict themselves when it comes to their ancestors. “Whenever it is suitable (when they want to emphasise their kinship with Turkic people), they say they are the followers of Oghuz Turks from Central Asia. In other occasions, when there is a contradiction with Armenians and they want to claim that they were historically in this territory, they say they are the heirs of the Caucasian Albanians” – says Galichian.
Galichian also mentions the armenophobic nature of the historical books printed in Azerbaijan. He highlights the fact that in the school history books the Armenians are called “those in black, who occupy our country and destroy our people”.
Techniques employed by the Azeri scholars to falsify history
Further, Galichian dwells on the techniques commonly used by Azerbaijani scholars to falsify historical facts and distort original sources.
• One of the most commonly used techniques is the arbitrary translation of original historical sources during which they either simply remove any reference to Armenia in the original or change it into something else.
One such example is the history of Karabakh written by Mirza Qarabaghi in 1840s. This book was translated into Russian characters in 1959 which was a correct translation; however later in 1986 it was revised and any name or sentence related to Armenia was either removed from it or changed. Armenian historian Movses Kalankatvatsi for instance became “Moisey Kalankatlı Turkish or Azerbaijani historian” and in the sentence where he gathers an army of 10,000 people to free Armenia, ‘Armenia’ is changed into ‘Albania’, as if he was an Albanian who wanted to free Albania and not Armenia! Another example is Bakikhanov’s book called Golestan-e Eram, which is transliterated into Turkish – the name Armenian is removed and the word ‘Armenia’ is mostly replaced by ‘Albania’. There are multiple such examples in Galichian’s books.
The fact that there was no written Turkish language prior to the end of the 19th century and that all the primary sources had to be translated into modern Turkish –Azerbaijani has become a good tool in their hands, says Galichian. “Whatever was written in the past was in Persian language and now they have to retranslate and transliterate those texts into modern Turkish– Azerbaijani language, which until 1929 was in Arabic characters, in 1929 was converted into Latin, in 1939 into Russian (Cyrillic) and in 1990s back to Latin again. Now, the people today who read Azerbaijani history read the Latin characters, they don’t know what is written in the Persian language (in Farsi)”, – explains Galichian and at the same time encourages the Azerbaijanis who know Persian to go and check out the historical books in the National Academy of Azerbaijan written in Farsi and compare them with their modern translations to see the falsifications for themselves.
Galichian also notes that the original sources and their correct translations do exist – original texts in Farsi for instance have been printed in Iran. Also, many European authors have translated those books into English and into other European languages. However, any new book contains these falsifications. These new books considerably overwhelm in number the books with authentic translation; they are made attractive to the reader, particularly to young scholars and students as they are printed in glossy covers, translated into various languages and freely distributed to libraries and think tanks all over the world.
• These books published in Azerbaijan also contain completely made-up information, names of non-existent authors as well as references to non-existent sources.
Galichian brings the example of a book called “Monuments of Western Azerbaijan” (by Western Azerbaijan they refer to present-day Armenia) which claims that all the historical monuments in the territory of Armenia, even the Urartian monuments before Christianity are Turkish! The book contains completely false information, which is simply made up (it for instance claims that supposedly there are Turkish inscriptions on Armenian churches). This book is written by certain Ăziz Ălăkbărli, which is a false name, as no such person exists, ensures Galichian. A number of academicians listed in the book likewise do not exist. While this book was published by the Ministry of Tourism of Azerbaijan!
There is another book written by Mammadova during 1980s. In the book it says the authors have made extensive references on the Albanian literature, however among 400 referenced sources there is not a single Albanian source, as no such sources actually exist, says Galichian.
Galichian mentions also that the Azerbaijanis have learned many of these techniques from the Turks who also present a distorted version of the history in Turkish schoolbooks.
State funding
In Azerbaijan the whole process of producing and spreading revisionist history is dictated and funded by the state. Millions of dollars are spent by the government of Azerbaijan, mostly through Heidar Aliyev Foundation, on publishing revisionist books and disseminating them worldwide.
Galichian recalls that President Aliyev himself announced in the Parliament in 2005 that he would reward all those scholars who would write books “proving” that the Armenians did not live in this area and that they are not indigenous people. Two years ago Aliyev publicly thanked all the scientists who had followed his instructions and produced these books. So these books are ordered and these scholars are paid for writing a specific version of history.
The Azerbaijani government also bribes foreign scholars to spread the Azerbaijani propaganda and to silence their criticism of Azerbaijani falsifications – cases, which Galichian has encountered personally.
Reasons and goals
Galichian explains that the reasons and roots of these policies pursued by Azerbaijan are to be sought in the Communist period. According to Stalin’s decree all the Republics were supposed to have their own history and culture. And since Azerbaijan was a new country with a new name, they were supposed to somehow appropriate to themselves the history and the culture existing in the area, and this is what they have been doing ever since. Galichian notes that even though the country was called the Republic of Azerbaijan in 1918-1920, the actual population of that country called themselves Turks and Tatars until 1936 and it required another decree from Stalin to change their name into ‘Azerbaijani’.
By resorting to the falsification of history Azerbaijan accomplishes political goals. For instance when the Soviet Union occupied Azerbaijan in 1920, they could have changed the name Azerbaijan to its original name – Shirvan, but they kept it because they wanted to use it against Iran as a political tool, which they did in 1947 trying to connect Iranian Azerbaijan to the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan but didn’t succeed. This is the power game of the ruling elite and they continued it since independence; “Since petro dollars arrived they continued it with more zeal and greater force”, – says Galichian. There is also the factor of Pan-Turkism (the idea of having Turkish-speaking nations from Asia Minor through Caucasus to Central Asia) which is rampant in Azerbaijan. It is in the interests of Pan-Turkists to have strong Azerbaijan and to unite with Turkey, and Armenia is a big thorn standing in their way.
According to Galichian, they do it also because their existence as Azerbaijanis per se is threatened if they say they are a conglomeration of different peoples. “The United States of America consists of many nations and they are proud of each of their heritages; Azerbaijanis consist of many races and tribes but they are not proud of the individual history or culture of each tribe; they say these all belong to one country, one people – Azerbaijani, which both are false”, – says Galichian.
The renowned historians worldwide are well aware about the historical facts and cannot be deceived by these falsified books; however the concern is with the young generation of scholars and students who should beware of these books lest they fall into the trap of Azerbaijanis and take their falsehood as reality, cautions Galichian.
Rouben Galichian is the author of “The Invention of History: Azerbaijan, Armenia and the Showcasing of Imagination” (2009), “Historic maps of Armenia” (2004), “Countries South of the Caucasus in Medieval Maps” (2007), “Clash of Histories in the South Caucasus: Redrawing the Map of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Iran” (2012) and other books.
Karabakh official: Joint management of water resources may be subject of talks with Baku
May 19, 2014 | 12:57
YEREVAN. – Nagorno-Karabakh is ready for talks with Azerbaijan to jointly manage water resources.
Earlier the question of joint use of Sarsang reservoir was raised by OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair James Warlick.
“It is good that the American Co-Chair also thinks that use of Sarsang reservoir may become one of the basis for cooperation between two independent states Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan,” spokesperson for NKR president Davit Babayan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.
Babayan said it may become one of confidence-building measures and reiterated Karabakh’s readiness to consider the issue of joint management of water resources.
“But, Azerbaijan must also show the interest. It must be a mutually beneficial process,” he said.
The ways to use water resources, what Azerbaijan can give in exchange for water – all the technical issues can be settled during political talks between Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan, Babayan added.
French journalists expelled from Azerbaijan “They were 15, they threw us on the plane”
Richard Lawrence Editor of the magazine investigation Cash on France 2
“Sunday, Emmanuel Bach (JRI) and I were part of the delegation of President Hollande during his visit to Azerbaijan. Us to investigate a number of “Cash investigation” which will be released in the fall on France 2.
Azerbaijan is a country that welcomes rarely journalists. Many are denied the right to enter. There are three weeks Elena Voloshin, a sister i> TELE, was banned from entering the territory. Us, we had all the necessary permits, including a 7 day visa. In addition, the Elysee was accredited us. Also, we could follow all movements. François Hollande was surrounded by many business leaders. All French industry was there: Total, GDF-Suez, Areva, etc..
Off camera, Holland with opponents
Azerbaijan is known, is an extremely repressive regime, poorly noted by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and Amnesty International. We practice torture against journalists, against opponents, against human rights. In our survey, on economic relations between France and Azerbaijan, we also wanted to show this reality.
Sunday, May 18, 2014,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com
Ceasefire Generation: Young residents of borderline villages reflect on past two decades of relative peace
Childhood against the backdrop of war, a first-grader’s party that never took place, a strong desire to get out of dark and damp basements… Ceasefire as a perpetual waiting for peace for the generation bearing the irreversible stamp of war, incurable memories…
Imagine us climbing up and down four-five times a day. At times we lived there for days. But everyone was so united and close. We cooked and ate all together. And the children organized a performance for the grown-ups almost every day.”
Anahit’s roots lie in the border village of Chinari in Armenia’s Tavush province (on the maternal line) and Aygedzor (on her father’s side) and reach up to her birthplace – the town of Berd, 10 kilometers away from the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which became of the theaters of war in the early 1990s, and even today regular ceasefire violations happen there.
Just like all men in this region Anahit’s father took to arms and protected the borders of their motherland, and the mother with three children continued living in Berd, but Anahit can remember that as the situation got serious her father moved the family to Aygedzor, closer to the border.
“Now I understand why: if your family is behind you, you will fight till the last drop, no place to retreat. In my war-related memory I can vividly remember the corridor of our house with three small sacks containing our birth certificates and clothes of first necessity. When shootings started we would grab our sacks and wait for one of the neighbors to come and help our mother to take us down the basement. I can still remember the panic on the staircases. I still hate panic.”
Having attended the kindergarten under the thunder of cannon fire, school under the “ceasefire shootings”, and later the Yerevan State University’s Faculty of oriental studies, Anahit is currently doing her PhD at Russia’s Saint-Petersburg State University’s department of oriental studies, where she was sent by YSU upon an international and inter-university agreement.
Parallel to her studies Anahit works distantly at the center for Western Armenia and Western Armenians issues study.
“I temporarily live in Russia. As our Armenian students at Saint-Petersburg usually joke “I’m an intellectual migrant worker,” says Anahit, whose two sisters and brother study in Yerevan, but her parents still live in Berd. “We sometimes use the occasion to go to Berd, Aygedzor and Chinari. Our attachment to Shamshadin is so strong and unexplainable. It’s not just a birthplace, it’s where you are yourself devoid of any pretense. However exhausted and frustrated you are just a one-day visit is enough to return with new energy, because you realize you have a lot to do, and no right to get exhausted.”
In her opinion an ordinary resident of the borderland does not care much about the ceasefire chronology, conflicting parties and conflict history, they need practical steps. According to Anahit, for any war survivor ceasefire is like air and water.
“If, for instance, you dine with anyone from Shamshadin, the first toast will be for peace. The ceasefire was necessary for both sides, the question is how we acted after the ceasefire and what lessons we learned. We had enough time to develop the border areas, but we did nothing, even worse, our population decreased and now we have what we have. In the border villages every day is an undeclared war. People got used to even that, and their only demand is social security,” says Anahit and adds that the state must carry out concrete steps to develop the border regions, must apply advantages for their residents – lower taxes, affordable medical care and education, support for small and medium-sizezd businesses, and most importantly, job opportunities, so that a university graduate does not have to leave for Russia or Yerevan to find a job.
According to sociologist Aharon Adibekyan, research shows that the generation born during the war or ceasefire years sees their future outside Armenia.
“Searching for a better fortune abroad becomes a painful point, however half of the generation grows to be patriots, we have our hope in them, not in those who receive their higher education and try to leave Armenia,” says Adibekyan.
War, ceasefire, border, daily shootings, mined areas… these words become common to the ear when approaching the Armenian-Azeri border, whilst away from the border they are like not-that-well-understood pile of phonemes heard in a film.
According to ethnographer Hranush Kharatyan, in general there is no understanding of the phenomenon of ceasefire.
“In Armenia there is a feeling that everybody speaks about war, but it’s not much of a reality, even the word ceasefire is not in our lives, and there is a feeling that people don’t have to be ready, I don’t think that’s the best state,” says Kharatyan.
Narine Vardanyan, born in the village of Nerkin Karmragyugh, in 1994, is well-aware of the price of both war and ceasefire and peace, and sometimes gets upset that her capital-born peers do not understand her, do not imagine her emotions and feelings when her hometown is under fire.
“Recently a historian with a very serious face was explaining what a ceasefire is. Perhaps he is right, only from his emotional speech he had to leave out the words agreement, document, conflicting sides and then he would have the reality – we reached ceasefire due to our men who fought, who fought and died. The relative peace that we have is not due to a piece of paper, it’s due to our nation-wide struggle,” says the coeval of the ceasefire agreement, who reminds that the paper-agreement did not serve its purpose, which is proved by the fact that Narine’s classmate boys are still in daily danger protecting the border marked by their fathers.
The first-year student at the YSU Faculty of Journalism, Narine has almost no memories of her childhood, she is told that the day she was born there was heavy snow, her father was in the front and for a long time they couldn’t find a car to take the mother in labor to the regional center of Berd, and when finally there was a car and they reached the hospital, there was no electricity, “we are a generation of difficult-labor and alive-with-a-miracle.”
Studying in Yerevan Narine confesses that she relates all her dreams and goals with her village, and she hopes she can put one of her hobbies, writing, to service to tell the world about the everyday life, history and heroes of her small village.
Narine tenderly packs some clothes for a couple of days, sweets bought for her parents in the village to spend the coming weekend in the village with her family.
“Going from Yerevan to our village for me is the same as going home on a break for a soldier. I look forward to it and I miss home and everyone even more the days before going there… Before I used to take some books with me, now I leave books, lessons, university, all in here not to bother me. By the way, I return to Yerevan just like a soldier returning back from his break – with a difficulty and missing my home, my real home.”
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