EU includes Southern Caucasus countries in neighbourhood policy

EU includes Southern Caucasus countries in neighbourhood policy

EurActiv.com, Belgium
June 15 2004

In short:
Fine-tuning its European Neighbourhood Policy, the Council has
decided to include Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia in the process.

Brief news:
The EU will include Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia in its European
Neighbourhood Policy framework through which it aims to improve
relations with the Union’s new neighbours to the East and South (see
also EurActiv 13 May 2004). The decision to this effect, which was
reached by the External Relations Council in Luxembourg on 14 June,
has been hailed by EU foreign ministers as a “significant step
forward in the Union’s engagement with this region”.

The broad aim of the ENP is for the EU and its neighbours to “share
the benefits of an enlarged EU”. The ENP “offers the prospect of an
increasingly close relationship, in the spirit of the Council’s
conclusions of 16 June 2003”. The Council decided to pursue the ENP
through specific Action Plans with the countries concerned. The plans
should have a minimum duration of three years and should promote
regional cooperation.

According to the Council conclusions, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
will be given the same opportunity to develop links with the EU,
including through action plans, and will be treated on their
individual merits in line with the general policy of the ENP.

Meanwhile, the Council has invited the Commission to finalise
exploratory talks on the draft Action Plans with Jordan, Moldova,
Morocco, Tunisia, Ukraine, Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Accessing Yemen’s historical importance and possible future role

Yemen Times, Yemen
June 15 2004

Accessing Yemen’s historical importance and possible future role –
past traits predestine future’s potentialities:
Yemen’s great past and future (Part 1/2)

By Prof. Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis For the Yemen Times

General View of Zabid showing old castle. (Hodeidah Gov)

It is certainly an auspicious event to see Yemen’s intellectuals
joining forces to face the various challenges of the future, and to
express their ideas about the possible ways the country will catch up
with the developed countries within our global world. The weight they
may exercise within the future politics of the country will certainly
determine the speed of the development, and the extent of the good
news anybody truly wishes to hear from the Great Old Land of the
Hadrami Frankincense and the Sabaean Wisdom. On this way towards fast
recovery, there is a need for criticism, when one needs an analysis
of what went wrong, but there is also a necessity for an overall
synthesis and better perception of the great historical past.

Geographical and Historical Determinism
Throughout world history, few factors have been so determining as the
geography of a land, and the basic traits of civilization that a
people developed at a certain historical moments. Egypt and Meroe in
today’s Sudan have been the Nile valley countries, flat and
delineated by the propinquity of the desert. Babylonia was the flat
land between two rivers (Mesopotamia, Beyn un Nahreyn); Assyria was
the land of Transtigritane, combining the vast Mesopotamian plains
and the surrounding mountains. Persia was the land of the plateau at
the east of Zagros series of mountains, and the Hittites felt at home
at the Anatolian plateau of Cappadocia that is demarcated by the
Taurus and the Pontus series of mountains. Greece is the land of
small plains among isolated mounts, and of little islands. In Lebanon
the phenomenon is very striking; at the coast, the Phoenicians of
Tyros, Sidon, Arad, Byblos, and other cities – states were turned to
long navigations and open seafaring, whereas 50 km inland Aramaeans
at the Bekaa valley, as well as further on in Damascus, Haleb, Homs,
were excelling in cattle-keeping, agriculture and land route trades
(as far as China!), being totally disinterested in the sea!

A unique turning point called Yemen
Where does Yemen stand in the ‘global’ world of the ancient Middle
East?
Land of the mountains and the small valleys among them, area of an
unprecedented Wadi-phenomenon at Hadramawt, focal point of land
routes and desert routes of trade, territory encompassing long and
rich coastal strips, turned to various seas, to the Red Sea and to
the Indian Ocean as we call these seas now, Yemen has long been the
most African part of …. Asia, or… the Asiatic part of Africa!
Undoubtedly, Yemen linked India with Egypt, East Africa with Assyria,
Persia with Sudan, Rome with China, all ways – land, desert and sea –
involved. But whenever a certain expansion of the many, various and
diversified Yemenite peoples, tribes and states took place in the
past, it was manifested in Africa. This is probably due to physical
delimitations, the Oman coastal strip being too limited a place for
expansion, the Hedjaz coastal strip being an uninviting place, the
greatest part of the peninsula being desert (Rub’ al Khali), and
other lands being simply … too far! What is closest to Yemen is
either the high seas or Africa…
Notwithstanding the great achievements of the Sabaean kingdom dating
back to the beginning of the first pre-Christian millennium, which
can be admired by modern visitors in several places of the Yemenite
North, and were hinted at within the Biblical texts (Books of Kings)
by ancient narrators, the first historical mention of the kingdom of
Sabaa goes back to the middle of the 8th century BCE. It is a
reference to tribute and gifts presented to the Assyrian emperor
Tiglat-Pileser (Tukulti – apil – Esharra) III (745 – 727) by Sabaa,
as well as by Arabs of the Hedjaz, and other countries. Despite the
Assyrian and the Babylonian expansion in the East and the North of
the peninsula (Yathribu was the summer residence of the Babylonian
Nabonid Kings in the 6th century BCE), Sabaa was too far for the
Sargonid Assyrian empire and the Nabonid Babylonian royal
pretensions.
Assurbanipal (669 – 625) ruled from Central Iran to Upper Egypt, and
from the eastern coast of the Persian Gulf to the western coast of
Turkey, but Yemen escaped his dominion by simply paying tribute.
Cambyses, the Achaemenid Shah of Iran, in the second half of the 6th
century, was ruling from Napata of Kush (today’s Karima in Sudan) to
Central Asia, but again Yemen was spared! Alexander the Great, at the
end of the 4th century, invaded all the lands between Macedonia and
India, but Pentapotamia (Pundjab), not Yemen, seemed closer to either
Pella (his first capital) or Babylon (his ultimately chosen capital)!

During all these long centuries, the peoples and the tribes of
ancient Yemen could not be kept united under the scepter of a
descendant of the famous Queen Balqis. Yet, writing was introduced as
early as the 6th century BCE, or to put it better, it was invented!
It would be essential at this point to stress the originality of the
event! At a moment the Assyrian – Babylonian cuneiform (‘al kitabeh
al mesmariyeh’ in Arabic), syllabogrammatic Writing (the term means
that the cuneiform characters were of syllabic phonetic value) was
diffused in Iran (introduction of the old Persian Ach
Shibam’s skyscrapers, in Hadrmout Gov.

aemenid cuneiform writing system that was in use for about 300 to 400
years), and the Phoenician and the Aramaic alphabetic writings were
diffused throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
(more precisely among Greeks, Israelites, Romans, and Persians), the
different peoples of Ancient Yemen, instead of adopting a foreign
writing system, developed their own syllabogrammatic writing, no less
than 1200 years before the arrival of Islam!
Through a historical overview of almost 1400 years of Yemenite
pre-Islamic history (based on Assyrian – Babylonian, Yemenite,
Persian, Ancient Greek, Latin and Aramaic sources), we can get a
clear diagram of several basic cultural characteristics. The
geographical divisions of the land of Yemen, many mountains and
plains, various coastal strips, all oriented differently to the outer
world, were probably the reason of the political disunion that mostly
characterized Yemen. Of course, this was repeated throughout Islamic
times, but it would be wrong for us to perceive disunion in terms of
enmity, fratricide or civil wars. We should rather see the various
ancient Yemenite states in terms of specific task assignments. The
war of Sabaa and Himyar against Qataban (around 115 BCE) is rather
due to Sabaean and Himyarite reactions to the Qatabanic performance
in respect of preserving the Yemenite thalassocracy and the complete
navigation control throughout the Red Sea at a moment of rise of
Ptolemaic Egyptian seafaring and sea trade in which Aramaeans seem
definitely involved. The different Yemenite states, Sabaa, Awsan,
Hadramawt, Main, Timna, Qataban, Raydhan and Himyar, were often in
agreement with regard to the role each one had to play in its own
domain with regard to a generally conceived Yemenite interest.
However, reunification considerations we attest only as late as the
end of the 2nd century CE, and it is the Himyarites, who seem to be
more conscious in this regard.

Yemenite expansion in Africa, in terms of population, language and
scripture.
Despite the lack of unity, or perhaps due to this phenomenon, many
waves of Yemenites have reportedly crossed the Bab el Mandeb straits,
and settled either in the African Red Sea shore opposite the Yemenite
coast, or further in the African inland.
What the famous Abyssinian legend and the great epic text Kebra
Negast (the Glory of the Kings) narrate is rather an extension to the
Biblical and the Quranic texts’ references to the legendary Queen of
Sheba – Balqis – Makeda, and to her contacts with Solomon, the King
of Israel. But it reflects perfectly well the reality of the
millennium-long, repeated Yemenite waves of Asiatic immigrants to the
Horn of Africa area. Menelik, as son to Solomon and Balqis – Makeda,
is an abstraction made for poetic reasons within the text, and it
concerns all the numerous Yemenites, who repeatedly and in successive
waves expressed their predilection for Africa.
It is not only literary sources and archaeological evidence that
testify to this event; full epigraphic and linguistic support is
offered for this assertion, since the ancient Abyssinian language and
scripture (dating back to the early Christian era) have derived from
the earlier attested ancient Yemenite semitic dialect and
syllabogrammatic writing. Gueze, as is called the ancient Abyssinian
language, is very important to Christianity, as one of the languages
and the scriptures of the Evangiles and the New Testament – along
with Aramaic – Syriac, Greek, Coptic, Latin, Armenian and Georgian.
Gueze is the ancestral linguistic form of modern Abyssinian languages
like Tigrinia, Tigre and Amharic (Amarinia) that are widely spoken in
Eritrea and Abyssinia.
The name itself of Abyssinia (‘-b-sh-t, Abashat) is mentioned in
Ancient Yemenite texts and epigraphic documentation as the name of a
… Yemenite tribe! This tribe, or at least a sizeable part of it,
migrated to Africa and transferred there its name that lasts until
now, as ultimate proof of the Yemenite origin of a large part of the
populations of Abyssinia and Eritrea.
‘Returning’ the compliment, Gueze – that was never lost, since it
still is the religious language and scripture of the Christians of
Ethiopia and Eritrea – helped a lot in the deciphering of the ancient
Yemenite epigraphic monuments. It was as useful as Coptic to
Champollion deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics. Without Coptic,
Champollion would have failed; without Gueze the likes of Conti
Rossini and Rhodokanakes would have failed too.

Part 2 next issue

;p=culture&a=1

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://yementimes.com/article.shtml?i=746&amp

Armenian FM meets US state secretary Collin Powell

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER MEETS US STATE SECRETARY COLLIN POWEL

ArmenPress
June 15 2004

WASHINGTON, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS: Armenian foreign minister Vartan
Oskanian met on Monday in Washington with the US State Secretary
Collin Powel. Oskanian arrived in the USA on a two-day working visit.
Armenian foreign affairs ministry said the two men discussed issues
on prospects of developing bilateral relations, recent regional
developments, Armenian-Turkish relations and Nagorno Karabagh conflict
resolution. The two conferred also Armenia’s participation in the
Millennium Challenges Account program, emphasizing its role for
Armenia’s economic and democratic developments.

The same day Oskanian met with the US national security advisor
Condoleeza Rice and her deputy S. Haidly. During the meeting the
sides mainly discussed issues on regional security, NATO summit to
be held in Istanbul and Nagorno Karabagh conflict resolution.

Oskanian held a number of other meetings, including with US defense
secretary assistant on Europe and Eurasia M. Rikardelli, US state
secretary assistant on Europe and Eurasia E. Johns and others.

Oskanian made a speech at US Center of Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS) and spoke about Armenian foreign policy and regional
security. He then responded to audience’s questions. Today slated
are meetings with members of Congress and Senate, as well as with
American Armenian organizations and US mass media representatives.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Pope may mediate Karabakh settlement – Vatican envoy

Pope may mediate Karabakh settlement – Vatican envoy

Ekspress, Baku
12 Jun 04

Ekspress on 12 June headlined “The Pope wants to be a mediator as well”

“Pope John Paul II may be a mediator in the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict,” the Vatican’s ambassador to the South Caucasus, Apostolic
Nuncio Claudio Gugerotti, told journalists yesterday. He recalled
that the Pope has been playing a major role in the settlement of
conflicts in “the whole world”.

“This is the second time that John Paul II has offered his mediation to
Azerbaijan and Armenia,” Gugerotti said. He called on the conflicting
sides “to express a decisive position on the issue before it is too
late”. Gugerotti added that the Vatican could make its positive
contribution to the just settlement of the conflict “without any
religious, racial and ethnic segregation”.

“One should appreciate this proposal. We are against shedding innocent
blood in any part of the world. We are ready to mobilize our all
goodwill efforts to prevent this,” he added.

Asked by our Ekspress correspondent whether “the Vatican recognizes
Armenia as an aggressor”, Gugerotti said that in issues of this kind,
he prioritizes “only general interests”: “And the interest here must
be a settlement to the Karabakh conflict.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian NTV channel off the Armenian air for good

Russian NTV channel off the Armenian air for good

A1+ web site
14 Jun 04

14 June: Russian NTV channel will no longer be broadcast in
Armenia. Today the National Commission for Radio and Television
[NCRT] unanimously decided to hand over the 23rd decimetre channel,
which previously relayed NTV channel programmes, to the Armenian
government for the transmission of Kultura [Culture] TV programmes.

The frequency was not put out to tender as it was given to the
government within the framework of an intergovernmental agreement on
the transmission of TV programmes concluded between Armenia and Russia.

The frequency was transferred to the Transport and Communications
Ministry. It is not yet clear who will rebroadcast. “The company
Paradiz [Paradise], which rebroadcast NTV, has no claims on it,”
the head of the NCRT, Grigor Amalyan, said. “The government has the
right to use it at its own discretion.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iran, Armenia sign customs memorandum

IRAN, ARMENIA SIGN CUSTOMS MEMORANDUM

ArmenPress
June 14 2004

YEREVAN, JUNE 14, ARMENPRESS: Last year Iran sold to Armenia $47
million worth goods, while Armenia exported to that country $18 million
worth goods. In 2002 this ratio was respectively $43 million and $24
million. Armenia sells to Iran mainly copper, aluminum and synthetic
rubber. Around 50,000 people from both sides visit the two countries
and 32,000 trucks cross the border from both directions.

A frame memorandum was signed last Friday by the two governments’
customs services to regulate bilateral trade, stipulated by the
inter-government cooperation agreement. The memorandum will regulate
information exchange and struggle against customs violations. It will
also approve the list of customs officials of both sides entitled to
directly contact with each other.

Karen Beglarian, head of an Armenian customs service department, said
the memorandum will also approve the list of some goods (all in all
16, such as arms, ammunition, cultural values and psychoactive drugs )
that are not subject to customs tariff regulation.

According to Gholamreza Safari Taheri, the chief of Iranian customs
service office for international cooperation, the memorandum envisages
also reciprocal administrative assistance, training of personnel,
exchange foe experience and holding of seminars.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ASBAREZ ONLINE [06-14-2004]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
06/14/2004
TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT <;HTTP://

1) Council of Europe Wraps-up Fact Finding Mission to Armenia
2) Armenians in Paris Rally against Turkey EU Entry
3) Georgia’s President Reaffirms $100 Million Allocation to Repair Javakhk
Roads
4) Former Armenian Defense Chief Released From Jail
5) Party Leader Shot in Azerbaijan

1) Council of Europe Fact Finding Mission to Armenia Wraps-up

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–A representative of the Council of Europe’s Parliamentary
Assembly (PACE) met on Monday with President Robert Kocharian and a string of
other senior Armenian officials, to end a fact finding mission on Armenia’s
compliance with democratic standards set forth by the organization.
Jerzy Jaskiernia, the Armenia rapporteur of the PACE’s Monitoring Committee,
is to draft a report on whether the Armenian administration is following the
recommendations contained in the assembly’s April 28 resolution on the
Armenian
political crisis.
“We will present our findings in our report. We don’t like to make any
comments during the visit,” Jaskiernia told reporters when asked to comment on
his findings.
Pointing to the release of all senior members of opposition parties, he
commented, “I think there is an intention by the government to fulfill that
resolution. Several of its elements have already been fulfilled,”
The PACE resolution warned that the Armenian government must immediately free
all individuals arrested for their participation in the opposition protests
and
investigate “human rights abuses” or face the possibility of PACE sanctions
next September.
However, the main focus of Jaskiernia’s meetings in Yerevan was the idea of a
referendum of confidence in Kocharian, suggested by the Armenian
Constitutional
Court in the wake of last year’s disputed presidential election. Government
officials reiterated their view that the proposal was not binding. Jaskiernia
agreed.

2) Armenians in Paris Rally against Turkey EU Entry

PARIS (Yerkir)–A public rally in opposition to Turkey’s accession to the
European Union took place in Paris on Friday, June 12. The rally was organized
by the Armenian National Committee of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation of
France.
Participants of the rally gathered around the monument of Komitas, which was
built in dedication to the victims of the Armenian genocide. From there, they
marched to the presidential palace, where in December of this year, French
President Jacques Chirac is expected to announce his final opinion on Turkey’s
admission to the European Union.
In addition to the recognition of the Armenian genocide, EU resolutions
adopted in 1987 and 2004 specify that Turkey must withdraw its troops from
northern Cyprus, lift its blockade of Armenia, guarantee the rights its
minority population and release its political prisoners before talks dealing
with the country’s accession to the Union are to begin.

3) Georgia’s President Reaffirms $100 Million Allocation to Repair Javakhk
Roads

TBILISI (Armenpress)–Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili reaffirmed plans
to allocate approximately $100 million for the reconstruction of roads
connecting Georgia’s Armenian-populated region of Javakhk to the capital city
of Tbilisi. The money is expected to come from $400 million in combined US and
IMF assistance for the repair of Georgia’s infrastructures.
Javakhk’s A-Info news agency reported Saakashvili confirmed the allocation
while in Adjaria, meeting with activists of his National Movement, saying that
improved roads would have a drastically positive effect on the region and its
population.

4) Former Armenian Defense Chief Released From Jail

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–Vagharshak Harutiunian, Armenia’s former defense minister
and
prominent member of the opposition, was released from jail late Friday
evening.
Harutiunian was arrested two months ago, charged with conspiracy to overthrow
the government.
The head of the investigations department at Armenia’s Office of
Prosecutor-General Andranik Mirzoyan, said that Harutiunian was set free
because he did not impede the ongoing criminal inquiry into his political
activities. Mirzoyan said that the charges leveled against the ex-minister
have
not been dropped, and that he may still face trial.
The move followed calls for Harutiunian’s release, by the head of the Yerevan
office of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Ambassador
Vladimir Pryakhin, who, earlier in the day said that the criminal case is
“weak.”
A senior member of the Artarutyun alliance, Harutiunian was among over a
dozen
opposition activists arrested last April on charges of calling for a “violent
overthrow of constitutional order” and insulting senior government officials.
“We do support enforcement of the law, but in this case the accusations are
quite weak because the suspect’s alleged crimes have not been properly
specified,” Pryakhin said, adding that he has repeatedly raised the issue with
Armenian prosecutors.
Harutiunian’s defense attorney, Robert Grigorian, argued that the prosecutors
have still not elaborated on their accusations. “They must specify which
speeches by Vagharshak Harutiunian… are deemed an insult against government
officials and which of his actions were aimed at a violent seizure of power,”
he said.
Harutiunian did not speak at any of the anti-Kocharian rallies held by
Artarutyun and the allied National Unity Party this year. The Office of
Prosecutor-General refused to comment on the details of the case, stating only
that “investigative actions” continue.

5) Party Leader Shot in Azerbaijan

BAKU (AP)–An opposition party leader known for his bold military exploits in
the war over the Mountainous Karabagh was shot and killed early Monday in
Azerbaijan’s capital, police said.
Fatulla Huseynov’s body was found by his neighbors outside his Baku home,
said
Yashar Aliyev of the city police. Neighbors reported hearing between four and
six gunshots minutes earlier.
Aliyev said police did not yet have a motive or suspect.
Huseynov, 67, was one of the leaders of Azerbaijan’s opposition Justice
party.
He also served as the vice president of the Association of Football
Federations
of Azerbaijan. He had previously worked in Azerbaijan’s Interior Ministry and
headed the nation’s road police.
In 1992-93, Huseynov fought in Karabagh, earning the nickname the “black
colonel” for his unit’s military feats.

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ANKARA: Turkish Speaker condemns Canadian parliament’s ruling onArme

Turkish Speaker condemns Canadian parliament’s ruling on Armenian genocide
   
TRT 2 television, Ankara
11 Jun 04
   
The Turkish Grand National Assembly reacted against the Canadian
House of Commons decision which recognized the so-called Armenian
genocide. In a letter to the Canadian House of Commons, National
Assembly Speaker Bulent Arinc said: This decision runs counter to
the efforts to normalize Turkish-Armenian relations in a sensitive
place in the world.

In his letter, Arinc said that describing the 1915 events on the
basis of distorted historical data as genocide is an inexcusable
mistake. Harshly condemning the one-sided and erroneous decision of
the Canadian House of Commons, Arinc demanded that this mistake be
corrected as soon as possible.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azeri daily reflects on reasons behind US general’s “unexpecte

Azeri daily reflects on reasons behind US general’s “unexpected” visit

Ekspress, Baku
11 Jun 04

The deputy commander of the US European Command, Gen Charles Wald,
paid an unexpected visit to Baku yesterday morning [10 June]. The
US embassy in Azerbaijan told Ekspress newspaper that the delegation
accompanying the Pentagon official had included 70 American civilian
representatives and business leaders who are members of the Joint
Civilian Orientation Conference (JCOC).

[Passage omitted: about the JCOC programme and reported details]

Why did Wald come to Azerbaijan? According to official reports,
one might answer the question as follows. The visit by the Pentagon
official aimed at ”inspecting” the implementation of joint programmes
between the European Command and Azerbaijan and looking into the
preparations for NATO’s Cooperative Best Effort 2004 exercises. In
any case, one should admit that the visit to our country by such
a high-ranking Pentagon general as the deputy commander of the US
European Command in Stuttgart is not limited to the ”inspection of
cooperation programmes” only. Moreover, the importance of the visit
for Washington is obvious, bearing in mind that it was Wald’s second
visit to Azerbaijan in the past two months.

So it was clear from the brief statement which Wald made in Azerbaijan
that the USA is concerned about the state of security programmes in
the region (concretely, security issues and the protection of oil
pipelines). However, this might be understood as a gesture by the
Pentagon to show its presence in the region, since the concern was
expressed at the same time as the five-sided working group on Caspian
status was holding its summit in Astana. Moreover, by declaring the
creation of a special group to carry out US programmes on the South
Caucasus, Wald showed that the White House did not intend to hold
back from projects on the Caspian.

To recap, at the working group’s Astana meeting Russia and Kazakhstan
suggested the creation of “a military balance” in the sea and a ban
on the entry of “foreign forces” to the Caspian.

Finally, let us recall that Wald, who visited Yerevan some time ago,
regarded as necessary the participation of Armenian officers in the
NATO exercises due in Azerbaijan this autumn and said that he had
received official Baku’s guarantee on the issue. It is no coincidence
that the US general’s sudden visit coincided with Yerevan officially
expressing its intention to attend the NATO conference in June and
saying that it would approach the Azerbaijani embassy in Georgia
over this issue on 12 June. It seems that the Pentagon general had
to visit Azerbaijan again in order to ”resolve the issue on the spot”.

[Passage omitted: Azerbaijan ex-foreign policy adviser positive
on visit]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Party Leader Shot in Azerbaijan

Party Leader Shot in Azerbaijan

The Associated Press
06/14/04 05:42 EDT

BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) – An opposition party leader known for his bold
military exploits in the war over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave was
shot and killed early Monday in Azerbaijan’s capital, police said.

Fatulla Huseynov’s body was found by his neighbors outside his Baku
home, said Yashar Aliyev of the city police. Neighbors reported
hearing between four and six gunshots minutes earlier.

Aliyev said police did not yet have a motive or suspect.

Huseynov, 67, was one of the leaders of Azerbaijan’s opposition Justice
party. He also served as the vice president of the Association of
Football Federations of Azerbaijan. He had previously worked in
Azerbaijan’s Interior Ministry and headed the nation’s road police.

In 1992-93, Huseynov fought in Nagorno-Karabakh, the ethnic Armenian
enclave in Azerbaijan, where he earned the nickname the “black colonel”
for his unit’s military feats.

Azerbaijani forces were driven out of Nagorno-Karabakh, and
a cease-fire was signed in May 1994. But Nagorno-Karabakh’s final
status has not been resolved and firing sporadically breaks across the
“line of control,” a demilitarized zone that separates Azerbaijani
and Armenian forces.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress