European Parliament President Is Disturbed By "What Appears To Be A

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT PRESIDENT IS DISTURBED BY “WHAT APPEARS TO BE A POLITICALLY MOTIVATED PARDON OF RAMIL SAFAROV”

Mediamax
Sept 5 2012
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax/. President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe (PACE) Jean-Claude Mignon said that Ramil Safarov’s
“liberation is unacceptable, and I am extremely disappointed by the
abusive use of a Council of Europe legal instrument in this affair”.

“I join the international condemnation of the ‘glorification’ of
the terrible crime which Mr Safarov has committed, and for which he
has been condemned by a court in a Council of Europe member state,”
said Jean-Claude Mignon.

“This scandalous liberation is having very negative consequences
on the already-strained relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
and also risks destabilising the situation in the region. I call on
the Azeri authorities to reconsider their position, in line with the
standards and the ethos of the Council of Europe,” PACE President
Mignon concluded.

From: A. Papazian

Protesters In Hungary Ask Forgiveness Over Extradition

Protesters in Hungary Ask Forgiveness Over Extradition
By Gergo Racz

Wall Street Journal
Sept 5 2012

A crowd of about 1,500 people gathered late Tuesday in Budapest and
asked for Armenia’s forgiveness in the extradition of an Azerbaijani
man, who had been convicted of murder but was later pardoned and
decorated upon his return home.

Hungary remains in the center of stoked historic animosity between
the two Caucasian countries after the surprise extradition Friday
of Ramil Sahib Safarov, an Azerbaijani national who was convicted
of murdering Armenian Gurgen Margarjan in Budapest in 2004. The two
men had participated in a NATO-backed training course. During that
time, Mr.

Safarov used an ax to decapitate Mr. Margarjan in his sleep and had
planned to assault another Armenian, the criminal investigation found.

Armenia was outraged by the extradition and severed all diplomatic
ties with Hungary after news of Mr. Safarov’s pardoning Friday.

Speakers at the event organized by the civil liberties group
Milla – derived from One Million Strong for the Freedom of the
Press – condemned Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government for its
participation in freeing Mr. Safarov. They asked the Armenian people
for forgiveness and called on the government to step down after
“shaming” the country.

Several participants at the rally carried photographs of the late Mr.

Margarjan as well as billboards condemning the government’s actions
in the extradition.

Hungary gave no prior public indication that it was planning to hand
over Mr. Safarov to Baku after he received a life sentence from a
Hungarian court. Government officials later condemned Azerbaijan
for its decision to pardon him and stressed that Hungary acted in
good faith and conducted the transfer transparently and in line with
international law.

This didn’t quell the anger Armenians felt over the matter, leading to
protests world-wide near Hungarian diplomatic units and the burning
of Hungarian flags. President Serzh Sargsyan urged fellow Armenians
not to abuse Hungary’s national banner, saying it was a symbol of
the people and not the country’s prime minister.

“For many years we have been on friendly terms. Many Armenians have
given their lives for the sake of Hungary’s freedom and independence,”
Mr. Sargsyan was quoted as saying by the Arminfo Armenian news agency.

“So, a mean act by one person or a party must not be allowed to
provoke our hostility towards the Hungarians. Of course, it is our
duty to protest, but we must not betray our values.”

From: A. Papazian

http://blogs.wsj.com/emergingeurope/2012/09/05/protesters-in-hungary-ask-forgiveness-over-extradition/?mod=google_news_blog

Axe Murderer Gets Hero’s Welcome

AXE MURDERER GETS HERO’S WELCOME

Yahoo!7 News

Sept 5 2012
Australia

A man who brutally murdered a sleeping student with an axe has returned
home to a hero’s welcome in Azerbaijan, sparking fears that peace
talks between Armenia and his native country could be jeopardised.

It took only a few minutes for celebrations honouring Ramil Safarov,
an Azeri serviceman, to commence after he arrived home last Friday.

Safarov’s celebrated status in Azerbaijan is due to the Armenian
nationality of his victim, a fellow student in a NATO-sponsored
English class in Hungary.

The victim was sleeping in his dormitory room one night in 2004 when
Safarov, carrying an axe, crept in and hacked him to death.

As well as an official pardon from President Ilham Aliyev, Safarov
has been promoted, given a flat and awarded the back-pay he had lost
since his arrest eight years ago.

The reaction to Safarov’s reception has embarrassed Hungary, which
agreed to extradite him on the assumption he would serve at least 25
years of a life sentence.

It has set off protests in Budapest and enraged Armenia, where
activists pelted the Hungarian embassy with eggs and burned Hungarian
flags.

Russia also condemned Azerbaijan’s decision to pardon Ramil Safarov.

Other groups called for calm and said the incident should not wreck
peace talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Safarov told the police his Armenian classmate, Gurgen Markarian,
had insulted him repeatedly.

During his trial in Hungary, Safarov also claimed that the
Azeri-Armenian war over Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s contributed
towards his actions.

From: A. Papazian

http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/latest/14770836/axe-murderer-gets-heros-welcome/

Murderer’S Pardon Stirs War Fears

MURDERER’S PARDON STIRS WAR FEARS

Bayoubuzz
Sept 5 2012

Written by Media Sources

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev pardoned a convicted ax murderer
after he was extradited from Hungary.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS An Azerbaijani solider killed an Armenian officer with
an ax in 2004 He was sentenced to prison in Hungary but suddenly was
paroled and extradited The killer got a new apartment and a promotion
on his return to Azerbaijan The parole has sparked fears of wars
between two former Soviet republics

(CNN) — An ax murder. Then, jail time. Sounds like a morbid crime
story.

Yet this tale has taken a sudden and unexpected twist: The killer
got a pardon and a hero’s welcome.

That has stirred fears of a war.

The parole has exacerbated long-standing tensions over disputed land
between Armenia and Azerbaijan, former Soviet republics that are
nestled in the Caucasus region near Turkey, Iran and Russia.

The nations fought a war two decades ago over the region of
Nagorno-Karabakh and

From: A. Papazian

http://www.bayoubuzz.com/component/k2/item/77413-murderer-s-pardon-stirs-war-fears

Al-Jazeera: The Axe Murderer Who Became A Facebook Hero

THE AXE MURDERER WHO BECAME A FACEBOOK HERO

Aljazeera.com

Sept 5 2012
Qatar

Azerbaijan has brazenly promoted a murderer as a national hero,
despite Western condemnation, writes Kendzior.

On February 19, 2004, Azerbaijani Army Lieutenant Ramil Safarov took
an axe and bludgeoned to death Gurgen Margaryan, an officer in the
Armenian army who was asleep at the Budapest military academy where
they were attending English-language courses organised by NATO. After
nearly decapitating Margaryan, Safarov stabbed his corpse repeatedly
in the chest. Safarov was arrested and tried in Hungarian court. In
2006, he was sentenced to life in prison.

On August 31, 2012, Ramil Safarov was extradited to Azerbaijan,
where he was greeted as a hero. As an adoring crowd cheered, Safarov
walked the streets of the capital draped in an Azerbaijani flag,
carrying a bouquet of roses. He was pardoned by President Ilham Aliyev,
promoted to the rank of major and given a new apartment and money by
the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry.

“I am glad to be back with the Azeri people,” Safarov said. “It’s as
if I am born again. I never lost hope of returning to my motherland
and believed that the time would come when the supreme commander
would resolve this question.”

Warning to the West

The small petrostate of Azerbaijan has made headlines in 2012. In
May, it hosted Eurovision, the annual singing competition watched by
hundreds of millions around the world. As Azerbaijan’s government
spent more than $700 million on promotion and infrastructure in an
effort to put its best face forward, activists focused on alerting
the world to Azerbaijan’s atrocious record on human rights.

Eurovision was seen as an “opportunity to highlight Azerbaijan’s
failings”, with the understanding that Azerbaijan’s international
image was of great importance to the Aliyev administration.

The Safarov case makes clear that it is not. While during Eurovision
the Azerbaijani government paid lip service to democracy – “Azerbaijan
is not an authoritarian state – we want to prove this to the whole
world” an Aliyev aide told the Guardian – they have since brazenly
promoted a murderer as a national hero, despite Western condemnation
and a possible violation of international law.

Azerbaijani officials portray Safarov’s murder of Margaryan as
a capsule version of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region which
Azerbaijan and Armenia have fought over for decades. The conflict led
to the deaths of thousands on each side, a massive refugee crisis for
Azerbaijan, and the occupation of the territory by Armenia. Safarov
versus Margaryan stems from Nagorno-Karabakh and serves as its
representation. Only in this version, Azerbaijan won.

“Safarov’s moral superiority was apparent even when he was in prison.

The Armenian’s insults towards our people, touching upon our national
feelings, forced him to take this step,” said Mubariz Gurbanli, a
leading member of the ruling New Azerbaijan party. Gurbanli refers
to an alleged desecration of the Azerbaijani flag by Margaryan and
presents Safarov’s response of hacking him to death as moral and
justified.

The Safarov case serves as a warning to the West that they should never
underestimate the insularity of dictatorships. Dictators struggle to
shield citizens from foreign influence, with the result that foreigners
come to believe that their influence matters. But the desire to block
out the outside world stems from paranoia more than respect and that
paranoia plays out in domestic politics – politics that strengthen
pride by encouraging enmity.

Azerbaijan does not care what the rest of the world thinks. No action
of a foreign power – be it international media or international law –
has the resonance of revenge.

When Safarov was released, Azerbaijani officials immediately proclaimed
it was for the benefit of the nation. “His release will raise the moral
and psychological mood of the society,” parliament member Zahid Oruj
predicted. He was right. Since August 31, Azerbaijanis have lauded
Safarov as a hero, and one of the main ways they do so is through
digital media.

Unlike most authoritarian states, Azerbaijan does not censor the
internet. An open internet has proven valuable for Azerbaijani
officials, as it allows them to monitor citizens and publicise the
punishment of dissenters in the online forums they frequent, deterring
sympathisers from further activism. The Safarov case shows that the
open internet is also a useful venue for the spread of nationalism
rooted in bigotry, vengeance and pain.

Popular on social media

Tens of thousands of Azerbaijanis have declared their support for
Safarov online. His Facebook page has over 49,000 fans. Supporters
praise him in poetry, thanking God and the Aliyev regime for his
return.

A picture of him in his regalia as major has over 2,000 “likes”. On
the unofficial Facebook page of President Aliyev, which is followed by
over 57,000 people, Safarov was made the cover photo, with a smiling
Aliyev in the profile picture below.

On Twitter, jubilant Azerbaijanis tweeted their approval under the
hashtag #Xo?G?ldinRamil – Welcome, Ramil.

These posts and tweets were not manufactured by the Aliyev regime.

They are genuine expressions of gratitude to a man who murdered
another man in his sleep.

In 2011, the government of Azerbaijan launched a propaganda campaign
designed to deter citizens from using technologies that connect them
with the outside world. The goal of this campaign was to strengthen
nationalist sentiment while stigmatising the use of media that may
further dissent.

Foreign television programmes were banned as an affront to the
“national mentality”, while domestic television programmes showed
“family tragedies” after young people joined Facebook and Twitter.

In March 2011, the country’s chief psychiatrist proclaimed that social
media users suffer mental disorders. As a result, internet use in
Azerbaijan has stagnated compared to its neighbours in the Caucasus.

The reaction to Safarov shows that such efforts may be misplaced. The
government never needed to promote Safarov as a hero or denounce
his detractors. Azerbaijani citizens are doing it on their own and
social media is enabling their efforts, validating their veneration
of a murderer through clicks and likes.

Not all Azerbaijanis agree with the adulation, but they are in the
minority. With Safarov, Azerbaijan is having an online grassroots
movement – a movement by Azerbaijanis and for Azerbaijanis, indifferent
to international indignation.

Advocates of an open internet have long hoped that openness will
augur democratic reform. But an open internet is of little benefit
to activists living in a state that punishes them for using it. It
is also of little consolation when the state is adept at capitalising
on public agony.

The online embrace of Safarov reflects the heartache of Azerbaijan’s
history as well as the ways digital media can strengthen dictatorship.

The people spread the cause and the government reaps the glory.

Sarah Kendzior is an anthropologist who recently received her PhD
from Washington University in St Louis.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/09/201293953565974.html

Bulgaria Air To Launch Flights On Sofia-Yerevan Destination

BULGARIA AIR TO LAUNCH FLIGHTS ON SOFIA-YEREVAN DESTINATION

Focus News
Sept 5 2012
Bulgaria

Sofia. Bulgaria Air launches regular flights on the Sofia-Yerevan
destination, announced the government’s press service.

The airline companies of Bulgaria and Armenia are yet to specify the
schedules, including the frequency of the flights.

The appointment of a Bulgarian operator on the aviation market
Bulgaria-Armenia will give passengers more opportunities and reduce
prices of airplane tickets on lines to Armenia. It is also expected
that the move will enhance the trade and economic relations with
Armenia, increase revenues from transportation of passengers and
cargo and revenues from tourism.

From: A. Papazian

Switzerland Ready To Assist Hungary, Armenia: Bern

SWITZERLAND READY TO ASSIST HUNGARY, ARMENIA: BERN

Expatica Switzerland

Sept 5 2012

Switzerland is prepared to assist Hungary and Armenia, whose relations
have soured over the killer of an Armenian soldier in Budapest, the
Swiss foreign ministry said Wednesday without specifically referring
to the murder case.

Swiss Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter had offered support when
he met his Hungarian counterpart Janos Martonyi in Bern on Monday,
ministry spokesman Jean-Marc Crevoisier told AFP.

“Switzerland maintains friendly relations with Hungary and Armenia
and … is prepared to provide assistance if wanted. This is in line
with our foreign policy,” he wrote in an email.

Crevoisier did not however mention the tensions between Budapest and
Yerevan over the case of Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani officer who
axed an Armenian soldier to death in Budapest in 2004.

He had been serving a life sentence in Hungary for the killing,
but after Budapest extradited him to Baku last week he immediately
received a pardon from Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev.

On Wednesday, the Hungarian foreign minister hinted that Switzerland
had agreed to help calm his country’s tensions with Armenia over the
Safarov case.

“During my visit to Bern on Monday, Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter
offered his assistance to smoothe Hungarian-Armenian relations,”
Martonyi told Hungarian public radio MR1.

“All means must be used to fix the situation and improve relations
between Hungary and Armenia,” he added, pointing out that Switzerland
was traditionally a neutral country with broad mediation experience.

Hungary says it was assured by Azerbaijan that Safarov would serve
out his sentence in his home country, and the pardon, coupled with
promotion to the rank of major, the award of a house and eight years’
back-pay, enraged Armenia and brought criticism from Europe, the
United States and Russia.

Armenia and Azerbaijan are locked in a long-running conflict over
the disputed region of Nagorny Karabakh, where they fought a war in
the 1990s.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.expatica.com/ch/news/swiss-news/switzerland-ready-to-assist-hungary-armenia-bern_242685.html

Hungary Accepts Swiss Help For Armenia Mediation, Martonyi Says

HUNGARY ACCEPTS SWISS HELP FOR ARMENIA MEDIATION, MARTONYI SAYS

Businessweek
Sept 5 2012

By Andras Gergely on September 05, 2012

Hungary has accepted an offer from Switzerland to mediate in a dispute
with Armenia caused by the extradition from the eastern European
country of a convicted murderer to Azerbaijan, Hungarian Foreign
Minister Janos Martonyi said today.

It is ~Sregrettable, unacceptable and to be condemned~T that Azerbaijan
~Sbroke its promise~T and pardoned Ramil Safarov, Martonyi told
Hungary~Rs state-run MR1 radio in an interview. Safarov, who killed an
Armenian soldier in Hungary in 2004, was transferred home last month.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-09-05/hungary-accepts-swiss-help-for-armenia-mediation-martonyi-says

Turkey Warns France Over Genocide Education

TURKEY WARNS FRANCE OVER GENOCIDE EDUCATION

Asbarez
Wednesday, September 5th, 2012

PARIS–Turkish Embassy in France sent a diplomatic note to France over
the latter’s decision to include the Armenian Genocide within France’s
secondary school curriculum, protesting the move and accusing France
of using “fake documents” in the textbooks, reported Today’s Zaman.

In the note, sent to the France’s Foreign and Education ministries,
Turkey demanded in that the French authorities revise what they call
“objective” data provided in the textbooks. The letters also called
into questions the text of telegrams sent by then Ottoman minister
Talat Pasha that prove the mass killings of Armenians were done in
a systematic and deliberate way. The embassy said the telegraphs
were fake.

The Armenian Genocide section in the French textbook include material
from a book by Aram Andonian, an Armenian from İstanbul, titled
“The Memoirs of Naim Bey: Turkish Official Documents Relating to the
Deportation and the Massacres of Armenians,” which is also known as
the “Talat Pasha telegrams” and was originally published in 1920.

Andonian was deported during the Genocide, and wrote in his memoir that
with the assistance of Naim Bey in Aleppo, he published the telegrams
of Talat Pasha, which outline the systematic plan to annihilate the
entire Armenian population.

Ankara’s letters also warned that the section in the French textbook
will “inflame hatred between the two nations.”

Last week, notorious Genocide-denying Turkish Minister of EU Affairs
said Turkey doesn’t know what Genocide is, claiming, once again,
that there was never a Genocide in Turkey’s history.

Egemen Bagis comments came during the opening ceremony of an
educational facility, where he also expressed his opposition to a
decision in France to include the Armenian Genocide as part of French
public school curriculum.

“If only all countries’ past had been simple and transparent just like
Turkey’s past. No genocides have occurred in Turkey’s history. What’s
genocide? Turkey doesn’t know what genocide is,” Bagis told the
Milliyet daily.

Bagis claimed that Turks are proud of their history and forebears.

France announced that it has included a chapter about the Armenian
Genocide in secondary school textbooks, which will be used across
the country.

Bagis was quick to voice Turkey’s “strong protest” over this decision
urging Paris to not test bilateral relations “once again,” reported
the Hurriyet newspaper.

“I call on the French authorities to intensify efforts to resolve
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in the framework of OSCE Minsk Group
rather than distort the historical facts,” Bagis said.

Chairman of the Turkish Parliament’s powerful education committee
Navi Avcı told Today’s Zaman in a recent interview that “the erosion
of French culture and the shift toward the radical right in French
politics that started with Sarkozy continues to have a negative
impact on the French education system.” “I just hope that sensible
French intellectuals will raise their voices against this kind of
provocative move that will plant seeds of hate in the minds of young
people in France,” he added.

The embassy also attached a detailed historical report on the 1915
events in its letter to the French Education Ministry. It claimed that
two books, referenced in the chapter of the French textbooks include
fake historical documents and Armenian activists whose academic
credentials are unknown.

The Turkish Embassy stressed in the letters that French citizens
of Turkish descent will be negatively affected by the inclusion of
the section.

From: A. Papazian

Hungary Summons Azeri Ambassador, Demands Explanation For Release Of

HUNGARY SUMMONS AZERI AMBASSADOR, DEMANDS EXPLANATION FOR RELEASE OF KILLER

Xinhua General News Service
September 2, 2012 Sunday 3:40 PM EST
China

Hungarian deputy foreign minister Zsolt Nemeth on Sunday summoned
Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Hungary Vilayat Guliyev to voice the
government’s displeasure over the release of Ramil Safarov, an Azeri
soldier sentenced to life imprisonment for killing Armenian Army
lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest in 2004 in Hungary.

Hungary turned Safarov over to Azeri custody on Friday after receiving
assurances that he would serve out the remaining portion of his
sentence, only to see Safarov receive a hero’s welcome, an immediate
presidential pardon, promotion to the rank of major and, allegedly,
eight years of back pay for the time spent in a Hungarian prison.

Nemeth called the presidential pardon unacceptable and condemnable.

Armenia has broken off diplomatic relations with Hungary over the
incident, charging that Hungary had struck a deal with Azerbaijan to
secure energy deliveries from that oil-rich country.

According to Nemeth, Azeri authorities had flaunted international
law and broken their officially reiterated promise that Safarov would
serve out his sentence. This move, Nemeth said, conflicted with the
attitude of trust that had evolved between Hungary and Azerbaijan in
recent years.

Nemeth presented Guliyev with a written protest from his foreign
ministry,underlining the Hungarian government’s shock over the amnesty.

Meanwhile, Hungarian officials continue to stress that they had acted
in accordance with the Council of Europe’s extradition accord in 1983
after Safarov’s legal representative asked that his client serve out
his sentence in his home country.

Hungary handles 8-12 extradition cases of this kind each year, the
State Secretary in Charge of Foreign Affairs for the Prime Minister’s
office Peter Szijjarto said.

Szijjarto voiced respect for Armenia and its people and said he would
like to assure the Armenian authorities that Hungary had remained
within the bounds of international and Council of Europe law, according
to Hungarian News agency MTI.

From: A. Papazian