Turkish historian on Azeri `lynching campaign’ against writer Aylisl

Turkish historian on Azeri `lynching campaign’ against writer Aylisli

February 14, 2013 – 15:13 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Azerbaijan has launched a lynching campaign against
writer Akram Aylisli, a Turkish historian said.

According to Taner Akcam, the author’s life is in danger over
nationalist threat. `Dictator Aliyev’s regime is taking every effort
to suppress protests, with Aylisli among his main targets.’

As the historian further noted, famous Turkish writers and human
rights protectors spoke in Aylisli’s defence, among them: Ragıp
Zarakolu, Ahmet Kardam, Aydın Engin, Baskın Oran, Cengiz AlÄ?an, Ufuk
Uras, Zeynep Tanbay.

Akcam further accused Aliyev dynasty for 1990s’ Armenian pogroms in
Azerbaijan. `Akcam’s `Stone Dreams’ tells the truth about the events
which occurred both long ago and in the recent past,’ Sesonline quoted
the historian as saying.

ANCA Desk: The Importance of Activating Our Local ANCs

ANCA Desk: The Importance of Activating Our Local ANCs
by Michelle Hagopian

February 13, 2013

It’s no secret that the power of most Armenian organizations lies
within our local communities. From California to New York, and
everywhere in between, we rely on our local leaders to step up,
motivate others, and produce results.

Look for more ideas in this column in the coming weeks.
The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is no exception to
this norm. We are a grassroots organization that advocates on behalf
of the Armenian-American community, and though we may have a few
individuals who lead regions, the bulk of what we do is thanks to you.

The ANCA Eastern Region has at least 25 local chapters, many of which
are manned by a small handful of the same people who lead other
Armenian organizations. We’re always grateful for their help, but
wouldn’t it be great if we had 20-30 people in each local ANC chapter
participating and leading their respective communities? It’s always
exciting to develop new talent and help those who are already spread
thin. Nothing would make me happier than to see an explosion of local
activity in the Eastern Region.

To that end, I’d like to offer some tips for our local committees that
are perhaps struggling or at a standstill without much direction.
We’ve got the power to influence policy-making at every level in this
country, and you should your voice and actions to cause change.

How to get the community involved

Many ANC chapters have been successful in promoting Hai Tahd by
sponsoring single lectures or lecture series, letter-writing
campaigns, panel discussions, demonstrations, and mass mailing
efforts, among other things. Update that a bit to the world we live in
now and you’ll see the same efforts but with slight tweaks (e.g.,
e-mails and Action Alerts instead of writing letters).

If you see an Action Alert on the ANCA website, , go ahead
and follow the phone scripts or sign the e-mail. But take it a step
further. Why not host a community phone-banking event? If the alert
requires hundreds of calls to Congress, why not have your local ANC
organize your community to account for 200 of those calls?

Hosting a lecture series or a town hall meeting is also a great way to
engage your community. You don’t necessarily need a particular reason
to do so either. Say you want to educate your community about Artsakh
and the struggle for independence. Ask me (or any other leader in the
Eastern Region) to help you find speakers and make it happen. Making
that phone call is half the battle; once you get the ball rolling,
organizing an event becomes a breeze with experience.

I would encourage those communities that have never sponsored a
lecture to start with one to gauge public reaction first before diving
into an extensive lecture series. It’s important to reach out to
regional leadership if you’re venturing into new territory, just to
ensure you have the help you need.

If you choose to pursue a lecture, here are some tips to guide the process:

Choose a relevant topic that will both educate the public and
communicate the ANC’s direction.
Compile a list of Armenian and non-Armenian speakers (professors,
human rights leaders, genocide scholars) who are experts or
knowledgeable about the topic. Try to get the best speaker, using a
list in order of preference. Be flexible if your first choice can’t
make it.
Publicize the event once you’ve secured a lecturer and have a date set.
Send flyers to the public using your community mailing list, and send
event announcements to sister organizations.
5. Send a brief press release to The Armenian Weekly and Hairenik
Weekly to publicize the event, as well as your church newsletter.
Regional staffers can help edit and distribute press releases to all
media.
Don’t forget non-Armenian media. Send public service announcements to
TV/radio stations, and press releases to newspapers and magazines and
to university campuses. Students love attending these events.
If the lecture is a success and you think your community could support
a lecture series, develop one! It can be a few months later, but take
your time with it and give the community something ANC-related to look
forward to.
These are just a few tips to engage your community. Look for more
ideas in this column in the coming weeks.

And, as always, if you ever need guidance, have a question, or just
want to chat, e-mail me at [email protected].

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/02/13/anca-desk-the-importance-of-activating-our-local-ancs/
www.anca.org

They Talked With Serzh Sargsyan in Azeri in Vardenis (Video)

They Talked With Serzh Sargsyan in Azeri in Vardenis (Video)

February 13 2013

Today an old man who had come to the campaign meeting of Serzh
Sargsyan, a candidate for president, in the town of Vardenis lavishly
praised Serzh Sargsyan for quite some time. After hardly reading the
text written on a sheet of paper, the old resident of Vardenis said:
`Now let me put aside the text I have written and say what is in my
heart.’ The old resident of Vardenis said what was in his heart in
Azeri. President Sargsyan joked: `It seems you miss those days, huh?’
and while that man was trying to translate what was in his heart into
Armenian, President Sargsyan said: `There is no need, there is no need
for translation; you have probably forgotten that I speak it too.’
What was in the heart of the resident of Vardenis was roughly the
following; the value of words is great, let alone the value of words
uttered by a man and a president, so one shouldn’t devalue those
words. Other details of the conversation between the president and the
resident of Vardenis in a video shortly.

Read more at:

© 1998 – 2013 Aravot – News from Armenia

http://en.aravot.am/2013/02/13/152173/

Armenia Displays Organic Products at World’s Leading Organic Exhibit

Armenia Displays Organic Products at The World’s Leading Organic Exhibition

10:39, February 14, 2013

>From February 13 to 16, seven Armenian food processing companies, led
by the organic certification company EcoGlobe LLC, will participate in
the world’s leading organic exhibition BioFach 2013 in Nuremberg,
Germany.
The participation of these companies in the expo was made possible
through the training and assistance of the USAID-funded Enterprise
Development and Market Competitiveness (EDMC) project, which helped
prepare and lead the companies closer to organic standards conformity
and production certification.
Together with EDMC’s local partner EcoGlobe, ABDA LLC, ASVA-RAF LLC,
Bizon-1 LLC, Beer of Yerevan, BioUniversal LLC, Nectar-Bonus LLC, and
Sis Natural CJSC will present Armenian organic brand and products,
including juices, herbal teas, and essential oils.
The companies will have the opportunity to interact with potential
customers, observe and analyze the market, and position themselves as
competitors in the field. `BioFach is not only a great image-building
opportunity, but also a proven knowledge platform that provides
extensive information about the organic sector worldwide,’ notes Nune
Darbinian, Director of EcoGlobe.

EDMC’s primary focus in this sector is to support Armenian small and
medium enterprises to improve their management practices and marketing
skills, upgrade food safety and quality, secure prerequisites for
conformity with organic standards, and identify possible niche markets
for their products. During the past six months the exhibiting
companies were audited and organic certified by EcoGlobe with support
from EDMC.
BioFach is the largest professional event for organic producers and
traders all over the world. The exhibition features a myriad of
products ranging from organic food, natural textiles to cosmetics and
body care, wellness products and accessories. For more information
about BioFach, please, visit

http://hetq.am/eng/news/23327/armenia-displays-organic-products-at-the-worlds-leading-organic-exhibition.html
www.biofach.de

Un quotidien traduit en justice par un homme d’affaires

ARMENIE
Un quotidien traduit en justice par un homme d’affaires

Khatchik Khatchatrian, propriétaire de la société « X-Group », a
déposé deux requêtes devant un tribunal de première instance d’Erevan
contre le quotidien Joxovurd et en particulier contre une journaliste
qu’il accuse de diffamation et d’atteinte à sa dignité. Il exige une
compensation financière de 11 000 euros. Le quotidien rejette les
accusations. En cas de condamnation, celui-ci dit risquer de devoir
cesser sa parution. Joxovurd suspecte certains hommes politiques
d’être derrière les pressions à son encontre. / Hayots Achkhar

Extrait de la revue de presse de l’Ambassade de France en Arménie en
date du 7 février 2013

jeudi 14 février 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

La réponse du Ministre des AE à la déclaration de quelques députés e

ARMENIE
La réponse du Ministre des AE à la déclaration de quelques députés
européens préoccupés par le possible mis en service de l’aéroport de
Stépanakert

Edouard Nalbandian, sollicité par l’agence News.am, a indiqué que si
lesdits députés européens étaient réellement préoccupés par
l’exploitation de l’aéroport de Stépanakert, ils devraient être
informés des appels des coprésidents du Groupe de Minsk s’agissant du
non-recours à la force contre les avions civils. « Pourquoi ces
parlementaires n’ont-ils jamais exprimé leur préoccupation face à la
rhétorique belliqueuse des autorités azerbaïdjanaises ? Quelle a été
leur réaction lors de l’affaire Safarov ? », a-t-il lancé. Il a
rappelé que ni l’Arménie, ni le HK n’ont jamais politisé la question
de l’aéroport de Stépanakert qui fonctionnera à des fins exclusivement
humanitaires. / Hayastani Hanrapetoutioun

Extrait de la revue de presse de l’Ambassade de France en Arménie en
date du 7 février 2013

jeudi 14 février 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.co

Wheels Of Fortune

ROADS AND OF FORTUNE

Kingdoms
Feb 13 2013

My grandfather, an Armenian shoemaker from Tabriz, Iran, lived the
last leg of his life in Southern California, a haven for Iranian and
Armenian diasporas who had traded war and revolution for a bit of
peace in the sun-soaked landscapes from San Francisco to Los Angeles.

In his new house, thousands of miles away from air raid sirens
and the nights he and my grandmother spent with my family in our
Tehran basement when I was a toddler, he hung up a painting of Mount
Ararat, the landing place of Noah and his ark. Even though Ararat has
technically been part of Turkey for a century, the Armenians still
remember it as theirs. And the mountain sits, framed, on a wall in
nearly every Armenian home from Fresno to Sydney, so they can wake
to its snow-capped peaks and dream of a home that once existed.

The mountain haunted me throughout my adolescence. As an adult,
its pull became too magnetic to ignore. In a moment of passion, I
handed in my resignation at my job as an editor. I wanted to go back,
travel the length of the diasporan string that had forever tied me to
my immigrant identity and tell stories in the process. My boyfriend
joined in on the idea, and soon we had broken our apartment lease,
crammed our belongings into my parents’ garage and headed to the
South Caucasus for three months.

***

In July, we found ourselves in the parking lot of an abandoned train
station in the Northern Armenian city of Vanadzor, while a cold haze
crept in and swirled with the heavy cigarette smoke in the air.

“There are no seats left, so you’re going to have to sit on this,”
the burly Armenian bus driver said, shaking a flimsy miniature wooden
stool in the air.

A faint laugh escaped from my lips. I thought he was joking.

He was not.

I watched family members who stayed behind wave goodbye to their
loved ones and looked up to the see the bus completely full, the
faces of passengers brimming with stories hidden in wrinkles and
creases pressed against the foggy windows.

This detail, of course, did not matter to our bus driver.

With one big push, he wedged the worn stool, called a “taburetka”
in Russian, tightly between two pleather seats on the bus and shook
his hands vigorously once more, beckoning me to get in.

He then turned in the direction of my horrified boyfriend who was
trying to convince me to wait for a roomier bus that would come by
tomorrow morning, but it was too late. We were both mute by then.

“You. Sit in the front with me,” the bus driver said, hauling him away.

As a woman, I wasn’t eligible for the front seat. In the
patriarchy-soaked South Caucasus, the idea of a woman sitting for
hours on end in the company of a male driver was too bold, too taboo.

I didn’t understand this at the time, but weeks later on another trip,
I watched a woman miss out on a ride despite the seat next to the
driver remaining bare.

It was the middle of summer and the relentless Armenian sun lit up
the shimmery flecks on her opaque panty hose.

“Can someone at least move upfront so I can get a seat in the back?”

she called as she stuck her head in the bus.

No one budged. The bus drove away, leaving her shadow outlined in
the amber colored dust.

Instinctively, I reached for a seat belt and soon realized that I was,
in fact, sitting on an unbolted stool in the middle of a van bursting
at the seams with bodies. The only thing forcing my chair to stay
in its place through a mountainous journey across Armenia and into
neighboring Georgia was the weight of my own backside and the fleshy
hips of the big-boned women on each side of me.

This was not just any bus. This was a marshrutka-Russian for “routed
taxi”-the mythical minivans used throughout most of the former Soviet
Union that give new meaning to the concept of public transportation.

Sturdy and cheap to both operate and ride, the marshrutkas are the
only things strong enough to withstand the raw South Caucasian roads.

In Armenia, they are the most common mode of travel both city and
countrywide, and for less than $5, they got me to the capital of
another country in record time.

The marshrutka, with its rattling floorboards, rusty exterior and
baseball-card sized photos of Jesus and the Virgin Mary plastered to
the dashboard, was filled with the wafting odor of fried meat piroshki
and potato-filled buns. An evil eye pendant, used to ward off danger in
this part of the world, hung from the rear view mirror and swung like
a pendulum, capturing every single pothole in its stride. The windows
remained closed, despite the dry summer heat. The driver continued
to smoke, despite a smoking ban for marshrutka drivers. And more
people continually climbed on board, despite a dangerously depleting
oxygen supply.

For hours, my legs remained buried under oversized luggage. Without
thinking twice, the overwhelmed mother sitting next to me plopped
her crying infant onto my lap. The constant swerving by our driver
combined with copious amounts of sweets proved too much for my newly
adopted 2-year-old. The rest of the ride, with a stop at the border
where the circulation slowly came back in my limbs, was spent helping
his mother clean him, while she tossed bags of projectile vomit out
the window into the picturesque Caucasian hills.

The most dangerous threat the marshrutka carried however, wasn’t
vomiting children, but grandmothers, who, noticing my male travel
companion, turned to sweetly ask if we were married. I quickly
learned, that unless I was prepared for silent scorn, I had to fib
and enthusiastically nod “yes.” In turn, they rewarded me with smiles
and handfuls of exotic Russian candy.

The marshrutka had no buttons to push to get off, no chords to
pull, no announcements about where we were. If you could manage, an
enthusiastic “stop” from the barrels of your gut that echoed through
rows of intimidating locals who carried everything from groceries to
bulky furniture, did the trick. The worn-in seats jiggled back and
forth, vibrating to loud nostalgic Russian pop songs as the driver
negotiated the pockmarked mountainous roads. I sat on a stool in
a 12-seat bus that had probably seen the fall of the USSR, with 20
other people, suffering through children with uneasy stomachs and
ear-numbing music. Passengers struck up conversations that ended with
invites insisting we spend the night at their house. It was terrible
and wonderful at the same time, and I loved every single minute of it.

The Caucasus is a place where the road to love and hate run parallel
and intertwine, where anything and nothing is possible, where tea
and blood boil in the same pot. Armenia lies in its southern tip,
its borders continuously fought over by vast empires, its diaspora
spread throughout every corner of the world, divided by genocide,
immigration, communism and war.

Its collective psyche, romantically shackled to the past and longing
for the future without much regard for the present, could be defined by
the singular striking image that haunted me, the snow-capped peaks of
biblical Mount Ararat. Beyond the walls of diaspora homes, it appeared
on posters, in books, even crudely taped down on the check-out counters
of ethnic Armenian grocery stores and printed on the labels of jams
and juices on their isles.To the world, Ararat was in Turkey. To
Armenians, it would always remain theirs. I often saw Mount Ararat
while on my marshrutka trips and wondered about my identity as part
of a diaspora created through survival rather than choice.

Just a couple hours away from Tbilisi, the marshrutka came to a slow
stop. A heard of cows passed through and in these hills, they always
had the right of way.

I remembered my grandfather, who would spend hours sitting in a
sun-bathed corner of his house rubbing rosary beads between his
wrinkled hands and dreaming of his ascent to Ararat. I would find him
with his eyes full of tears looking out of the window, half-expecting
Ararat to appear. When he died, I dreamt that he had floated in
his sleep across the ocean and found his final resting place in its
snowy peaks.

The herd moved along the bumpy road in southern Georgia and so did
the marshrutka. I, too, had felt like I was moving, and leaving beyond
the frames of the oil painted-mountain neatly hung against the wall.

“I am looking for the people who have always been there and belong
to the places they live,” travel writer Norman Lewis once said.

But with a growing diaspora uprooted and displaced at various
junctions throughout history, the idea of ‘home,’ of belonging, had
never really settled in. It was not Ararat, but the roaming marshrutka
that was encompassing the soul of Armenia for me. Home was a dusty
minivan plastered with placards of the Virgin Mary that was full of
people and always stopped for cows. The marshrutka was the embodiment
of Armenia’s gravitational pull that jerked you back no matter how
far away you were-a ground zero for the world’s opposite forces,
destined to live so closely intertwined: love and hate, peace and war,
joy and pain, rich and poor.

There were upscale taxis and even tour buses commonly used by diasporan
groups that would have perhaps been a more logical choice for the
trip my boyfriend and I took, but the decision to ride across the
country in marshrutkas was, ultimately, the right one. The lack of
safety, the strangers who spoke to me as if I was one of their own,
was thrilling. It taught me that identity doesn’t stop at kebab shops
or paintings of snowy mountains. Identity expands and changes and if
you let it, it makes room for new narratives. Being Armenian, for me,
now also means riding around in a decrepit minivan among locals with
stories to tell, the wind furiously blowing in your face while sitting
on an unbolted wooden stool.

Giddy from the long ride and the melt-in-your-mouth apricots Armenia
is famous for, we took more marshrutka adventures after we crossed
the Armenia-Georgia border. We soon headed to Nagorno-Karabakh,
the de facto republic that was the scene of a bloody war between
Armenia and neighboring Azerbaijan in the early 90s. The physical
and psychological scars of the ‘frozen’ conflict remain. Even today,
the only way to enter Karabakh is through Armenia, which retains
control of the landlocked region.

Traveling there by marshrutka did not require much thought, but I
couldn’t decide if it was misfortune, or perhaps luck that led me
back to the wooden stool again.

“Problem chika. Problem chika,” the driver said as he pulled the
taburetka out from the van’s trunk. “There won’t be a problem, there
won’t be a problem.”

I spent much of the journey grabbing onto anything I could find
inside the van-the door, seats, my boyfriend’s legs-that I thought
would keep me remotely stable, while we twirled up and down deep
within the forested Caucasus mountains. I caught our driver smirking
in the rear view mirror.

Droplets of sweat swelled beneath my cardigan, dancing to the
soundtrack of Russian love ballads. From Karabakh’s capital,
Stepanakert, we rode another van to Shushi, visited a defunct
mosque-its damaged minarets still showing signs of the war-and ate
watermelon with two elderly men in the town square who happily told
us the sad, rich stories of Shushi’s past.

On the day we had intended to leave Karabakh, a bus strike began. With
time to waste, we ventured to the back of the station, randomly picked
a minivan and hopped on. The mountains hugged the marshrutka as it
chugged up the landscape, Stepanakert no longer in sight.

We were anomalies on the bus, foreigners who spoke Armenian. A woman
turned around and enthusiastically practiced her limited English
with us. A family cajoled us into coming home with them. In the West,
receiving an invitation from a stranger on a bus might make you change
your seat. In the hospitable Caucasus, refusing it is tantamount to
committing murder.

Lost in the ancient city of Amaras, where Mesrop Mashtots, the founder
of the Armenian alphabet, established his first school, we found
ourselves sitting on a mattress in a backyard with small children, wild
chickens and a vineyard as our backdrop. I gritted fresh honeycomb
between my teeth as our hosts poured the thick, mud-like Armenian
coffee I had once hated back home, but now couldn’t wait to drink.

On the long drive back to the bus station, we stopped to rest at a
waterfall. “Here,” our new host Anahit said, handing me a plastic cup.

“Drink.” The waterfall was a good omen, the bearer of much
luck. The crisp water slid down my throat, its essence-or maybe its
luck-lingering there for hours.

Back in Armenia, we traveled to Gyumri with locals, a glorious city
once part of the Silk Road still reeling from an earthquake that left
upwards of 25,000 dead. What it lacked in infrastructure, it made
up in immense, and at times overpowering, soul. During Vartavar, a
national water festival, we went to Garni, a village that was the site
a pagan-era temple of the same name. We hopped back on the marshrutka
completely drenched. The damp van reeked as we passed decrepit Soviet
buildings left unfinished for decades. We almost missed the marshrutka
to Ashtarak, spending half of the 20-cent journey catching our breath
while cheap, Soviet-era cars with watermelon-filled trunks drove by.

In the Southern Armenian city of Sisian, we attended a pagan new year
festival on the 3500-year-old site of Zorats Karer, an astronomical
wonder older than Stonehenge.

Months after I left Armenia, I found out the marshrutkas were slowly
being phased out, set to be replaced with shiny, new buses. They
will have no Virgin Mary photos or wooden stools, but rather leather
seats and clean dashboards and perhaps even seat belts. The vomiting
children however, would always be around.

The change won’t take place for a few years, but I have hung a framed
photo of a marshrutka on my wall back home in the U.S., just in case
I can’t make it back in time.

Liana Aghajanian is a Los Angeles-based journalist who can also be
found in London and the South Caucasus. She has written for Foreign
Policy, the BBC, and Mental Floss, among others. She also runs Ianyan
Magazine (http://www.ianyanmag,com), an online mag dedicated to news
and views from the Caucasus. Follow her on Twitter @writepudding

http://roadsandkingdoms.com/2013/marshrutka/

Azerbaijan Former Deputy Gular Ahmedov Was Arrested As A Result Of A

AZERBAIJAN FORMER DEPUTY GULAR AHMEDOV WAS ARRESTED AS A RESULT OF A SCANDAL CONCERNING THE SALE OF SEATS

20:44 13/02/2013 ” LAW

By the decision of the Sabail court of Baku Gular Akhmedov ex-deputy
of Azerbaijan, was arrested for a period of 2 months, Azerbaijani
site Haqqin.az.

The report noted that relatives of Gular Ahmedov had already gathered
in front of the prosecutor’s office of Baku and at the moment express
their astonishment at the unexpected direction of the case.

Gular Ahmedova was arrested on the basis of the case of Elshad
Abdullayev. In an interview with “Haqqn.az,” spokesman of General
Prosecutor’s Office Eldar Sultanov refused to comment on the arrest
of Gular Akhmedov.

Late in September 2011 video was spread in the Internet where the
former rector of International University of Azerbaijan Elshad
Abdullayev was bargaining with Azerbaijani MP Gular Ahmedova about
the amount of the bribe which the rector was to pay to be “elected”
as deputy. After distribution of the video in the Internet criminal
case on “fraud” was opened.

Abdullayev said that he applied to various state bodies of Azerbaijan
in connection with the abduction of his brother. He also noted that he
had met with the head of the Azerbaijani Presidential Administration
Ramiz Mehtiyev and had discussed with him a number of questions.

Mehtiyev named Abdullayev’s all statements “libel”, but he did not
deny the fact that the meeting had taken place.

Source: Panorama.am

Serious Developments On The Political Field Inevitable, Expert Says

SERIOUS DEVELOPMENTS ON THE POLITICAL FIELD INEVITABLE, EXPERT SAYS
Artak Barseghyan

“Radiolur”
18:57 13.02.2013

The presidential elections of February 18 will not be followed by
demonstrations and acts of protest, expert of political technologies
Karen Kocharyan predicts. According to him, serious developments in
the political field after the presidential elections are unavoidable.

The target of the political struggle will be the next elections in
2018, where the authorities will nominate a new candidate.

Karen Kocharyan found it hard to predict the developments in the
field of opposition. He voiced confidence that in the next elections
we’ll have charismatic leaders, the lack of which is felt in the
current campaign.

The expert does not rule out that the authorities may nominate
Robert Kocharyan in the next elections. In our political reality
politicians tend to return to big politics, as Karen Demirchyan and
Levon Ter-Petrosyan did in 1998 and 2008 respectively, he said.

The Independent: Campaign Against Ekrem Eylisli Is Aimed At Divertin

THE INDEPENDENT: CAMPAIGN AGAINST EKREM EYLISLI IS AIMED AT DIVERTING ATTENTION FROM DOMESTIC PROBLEMS IN AZERBAIJAN

19:26 13/02/2013 ” SOCIETY

A politician in Azerbaijan has offered a cash reward for anyone who
slices off the ear of a controversial writer – the latest twist in an
alleged hate campaign waged by the country’s authoritarian government
in an apparent attempt to distract attention from internal issues,
the British newspaper The Independent writes.

“The author, Akram Aylisli, is in trouble for his novel Stone Dreams,
in which he portrayed scenes of violence carried out by Azerbaijanis
against their Armenian foes during the riots that accompanied the
break-up of the Soviet Union. What appears to be a coordinated campaign
has been unleashed against him, with television programmes and official
pronouncements railing against the writer,” the article says.

The article also says that He was expelled from the Union of Writers
and had his presidential pension rescinded. His wife and son have
also lost their jobs, while protesters have organized book-burnings of
his works, held pickets outside his house, and burned effigies of him.

Events took an even more alarming turn when Hafiz Haciyev, the head
of a pro-government political party, said his party would pay 10,000
manat (£8,000) for the ear of the author.

“The book was meant to be about conciliation between Azeris and
Armenians,” Mr. Eylisli told The Independent from Baku. “I realized
when I wrote it that it could be controversial, but I didn’t for
a minute think that there would be this giant campaign, on a state
level.”

“If a person has no national spirit, he cannot have a sense of
humanity,” said Ali Hasanov, an aide to Azerbaijan’s President,
Ilham Aliyev, commenting on Mr Aylisli’s novel. “The Azerbaijani
people must express public hatred towards these people.”

“The Azerbaijani authorities have an obligation to protect Akram
Aylisli,” said Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at
Human Rights Watch. “Instead, they have led the effort to intimidate
him, putting him at risk with a campaign of vicious smears and
hostile rhetoric.”

According to the article, the campaign comes after a period of
unusual civil unrest in the country, as Mr Aliyev prepares to
stand for re-election later in the year. Last month, thousands of
people attended an unsanctioned rally in Baku over conditions in the
military, and later there were violent protests in a provincial town
after a minister’s son crashed his luxury car into a local’s more
modest vehicle. Although the President still retains the support
of the majority of Azeris, analysts say discontent over Mr Aliyev’s
authoritarian methods and the rampant corruption of the ruling elite
is eroding the regime’s popularity.

“Something is definitely changing in Azerbaijan,” said Emin Milli,
a blogger and activist who was released from a 15-day jail sentence
for organising unsanctioned rallies last month. “For the first time,
thousands of people are coming out to protest. This is the government’s
old game to rally support – play the nationalist card.”

Ekrem Eylisli is national writer (since 1998) and Honored Artist
of Azerbaijan, holder of the highest order of Azerbaijan “Istiglal”
(2002) and the order of “Shokhrat” for his outstanding merits in the
literature of Azerbaijan. Recently, on the website of Russian magazine
“Friendship of Nations” was published his novel titled “Stone Dreams”
in which the author describes the massacres of Armenians in Baku
in 1990 and in Nakhichevan in 1919. The author in his novel speaks
positively about the Armenian people and their culture.

After the publication of the novel, Eylisli was exposed to severe
pressures in Azerbaijan; the pro-governmental youth held rally next
his home, his issue was discussed in the parliament of Azerbaijan,
MPs suggested to burn his books and to deprive him of citizenship and
deport from Azerbaijan. Many people “blamed” Eylisli in his Armenian
origin, etc.

http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/02/13/independent/