Azerbaijani Authorities Plan To Kill Ramil Safarov To Start War In K

AZERBAIJANI AUTHORITIES PLAN TO KILL RAMIL SAFAROV TO START WAR IN KARABAKH (PHOTOS)

news.am
September 04, 2012 | 15:01

YEREVAN. – The Azerbaijani authorities plan to kill Ramil Safarov,
who murdered the Armenian lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan in 2004 in
Budapest, than was extradited to Azerbaijan on Aug. 31 and granted
pardon, Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh] war veteran and hero Arkadi
Ter-Tadevosyan said at a press conference. Photo coverage of the
story is available here.

He also said that Safarov was a part of a big deal initiated by Turkey
and Azerbaijan.

“Azerbaijan intends to resume war in Karabakh and Safarov was a part
of the plan. According to a military theory, war resumption requires
three components, including powerful army, high level of trust of
population towards the authorities and preparedness of the society.

Safarov had to satisfy the last two components,” Ter-Tadevosyan said
adding by extraditing Safarov, Aliyev secured the second component,
while the Armenian reaction only made it stronger.

As for the third component, preparedness of society, Safarov’s death
is necessary for ensuring this last one. Azerbaijani authorities
intend to kill Safarov and later to catch and to imprison someone
with Armenian origin just to say that alleged killer of Safarov acted
according to the orders of the Armenian authorities.

“Such a step will bring forth double reaction. On the one hand,
it will cause the Azerbaijani society, who believes de-facto that
Safarov was a national hero, to make revenge and will raise their
preparedness to military actions. On the other, the Armenian side will
be blamed for terrorism and entering Azerbaijan, hence justifying the
resumption of military actions in the eyes of the world community and
receiving its support,” the war veteran said adding the war threat
has significantly escalated.

At the same time, he does not doubt that the Armenian side will win
the war.

From: Baghdasarian

[Windows-1252] Armenian Parliament Condemns Ramil Safarov’s Extradit

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT CONDEMNS RAMIL SAFAROV’S EXTRADITION

tert.am
04.09.12

The Hungarian authorities share the responsibility for extraditing
Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan, and Armenia’s National Assembly (NA)
condemns the Hungarian authorities’ conduct and suspends official
relations with the Hungarian parliament, says a draft statement by
the Armenian NA.

According to the draft statement, Azerbaijan’s step is one more threat
to regional security, which incites hatred for Armenians, violates
the human rights guaranteed by international documents. Azerbaijan
is once again demonstrating its consistent policy of thwarting
the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and the work carried out by the
international community, particularly the OSCE Minsk Group.

Armenia’s parliament is to hold a special meeting on Wednesday to
discuss and adopt the draft statement.

The atmosphere of hatred for Armenians created at the state level
proves that Nagorno-Karabakh can by no means be part of Azerbaijan,
says the draft.

Armenia’s parliament is calling on all the parliaments respecting
democratic values to condemn the Azerbaijani-Hungarian deal. Armenia’s
parliament expects international parliamentary organizations’
adequate response.

The draft statement underlines that, as a host country, Hungary failed
to ensure the participants’ safety during the NATO training courses.

What is more, before they decided in favor of Ramil Safarov’s
extradition, Hungarian authorities could not but realize that
extraditing a criminal sentenced to life imprisonment to Azerbaijan
was tantamount to releasing him and setting a precedent for further
crimes against Armenians on ethnic grounds.

From: Baghdasarian

D. Harutyunyan: We Shouldn’t Allow The Slaughterers To Think That Th

D. HARUTYUNYAN: WE SHOULDN’T ALLOW THE SLAUGHTERERS TO THINK THAT THEY CAN ENJOY IMPUNITY FOR THE MURDER DRIVEN BY ETHNIC OR RELIGIOUS HATRED

Chairman of the Armenian delegation to PACE Davit Harutyunyan
delivered a speech at the Bureau of the Council of Europe Parliamentary
Assembly. Mr. Harutunyan especially said:

“Dear President, colleagues,

I would like to bring up an issue that raises our deep concern and
directly affects

not only the fragile equilibrium in South Caucases region â~@¢but
also challenges our common values shared by the members of the Council
of Europe.

This is the issue of transfer of Ramil Safarov from Hungary to
Azerbaijan and his consequent pardon by the President of that country.

But first, let me briefly recall the background of the issue before
coming to the core message.

Ramil Safarov is an Azerbaijani serviceman imprisoned in Hungary since
19 February 2004, sentenced to life imprisonment for hacking Armenian
Lt.Gurgen Margaryan to death with an axe in 2004 in Budapest. Safarov
killed Armenian Lt Margaryan when he was asleep in his room at a
military academy in Budapest, where both servicemen attended NATO
English-language courses. Safarov is trying to kill also the second
Armenian servicemen, who slept in other room, but fortunately others
prevented that.

In 2006 the Hungarian court of first instance sentenced Safarov to
life imprisonment without the right to apply for parole until 2036.

The Court took into account the premeditated nature and brutality of
the crime and the fact that Safarov showed no remorse for his deeds.

The Hungarian Cassation court upheld the ruling following an appeal
filed by Safarov’s lawyer.

Ever since the court decision Azeri authorities were trying to persuade
Hungarian side to extradite Safarov to Azerbaijan. But given the
fact that Ramil Safarov’s crime was glorified in Azerbaijan and he
himself was treated as a hero, as an example to be followed by the
youth Armenia expressed its concern over such a possibility. And the
Armenian government has been in contact with the Hungarian authorities
over this issue permanently and received the latter’s assurances that
the issue of extraditions is not on the agenda. Last time we received
such assurances is a week ago.

However, contrary to all those assurances, on 31 August 2012 Hungary
transferred Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan to serve the remainder of
his sentence there, after presumably receiving assurances from the
government in Baku that his sentence would be enforced. On the same
day by the decree of the President of Azerbaijan he was immediately
pardoned and set free. On the same day he was promoted from lieutenant
to the rank of a major, the Azeri state also gave him a new apartment
and 8 years’ worth of military salary to compensate for the years he
spent in the Hungarian jail-cell.

Without going into details of the portion of responsibility Hungary
bears in this matter and the obvious naivety of the legal explanation
given by the Hungarian Authorities over Safarov’s transfer, I would
like to touch upon the two other aspects of the issue.

First, Safarov had been transferred to Baku on the basis of a
1983 Strasbourg Convention on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons
guaranteeing convicted prisoners the right to serve their punishment
in their home country. However, clemency granted to Ramil Safarov on
the day of his arrival by the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev,
reveals some shortcomings of the convention. It is evident that we
could not always count on the good faith of the countries to which
sentenced persons are transferred, and as we have seen some of them
are ready to abuse the rights provided for in the convention.

Secondly, according to the judgement, the horrendous manslaughter
took place only because Gurgen Margaryan was an Armenian, as
murderer admitted himself during the testimony. The environment of
glorification and justification of the murderous act of Ramil Safarov
has been cultivated in Azerbaijan at official level, including the
level of President of Azerbaijan. It is noteworthy that this heinous
crime has consistently received public praise at an official level in
Azerbaijan. Ombudsperson of Azerbaijan called the murderer example of
patriotism for the Azerbaijani youth. In 2005, Safarov was awarded
the “Man of the Year 2005â~@³ by the National Democratic Party of
Azerbaijan for his deed.

On the day of his arrival to Baku and after he was set free he was
paraded around as a hero during celebrations hosted by the Azeri
state. By the way, during the celebrations he has been accompanied
by the members of Azerbaijani delegation in PACE, which is also an
alarming signal.

May also I remind you the words of the then Permanent Representative
of Azerbaijan to the Council of Europe Agshin Mehdiyev: “I do not
advise Armenians to sleep safely until the Karabakh conflict is
settled. Incidents like in Budapest cannot be ruled out.”

By the way – nobody in this organisation reacted to those words.

All these developments indicate clearly the level of state sponsored
policy of cultivating racist and xenophobic anti-Armenian sentiments in
the society. This is a very dangerous and worrisome sign not only for
Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia but also for the whole system of values
that we share and committed ourselves to promote and upheld. We cannot
ignore these developments, we cannot stand aside, we have to react.

Armenia expects that this time the Council of Europe will react
promptly and accordingly to these unacceptable developments which
have undermined respect for justice, human rights and human dignity
and challenge the very essence of the Council of Europe values
and commitments. Otherwise it may give rise to and nourish racial
discrimination, xenophobia, and intolerance in a Council of Europe
member state. We shouldn’t allow the slaughterers to think that they
can enjoy impunity for the murder driven by ethnic or religious hatred.

We would encourage clear and unambiguous message of PACE in this
matter, most relevant though the organizing of debates under urgent
procedure.

It’s our responsibility – legal and moral – to show consistency that
values do not only have to be preached, but also upheld. Otherwise by
our non-actions we will wilfully support the cause of a brutal murderer
driven by nationalism and ethnic hatred. Moreover, the refusal to
have our say will put at stake the credibility of the whole idea of
Convention system of our Organization, let alone the human rights,
democracy and rule of law.

Silence and indifference, ambiguous and vague statements of PACE are
not anymore an option”.

From: Baghdasarian

http://times.am/?l=en&p=11929

BAKU: Armenian Leadership Deliberately Fanning Noise Around Safarov’

ARMENIAN LEADERSHIP DELIBERATELY FANNING NOISE AROUND SAFAROV’S NAME – MFA

News.Az
Tue 04 September 2012 13:44 GMT | 14:44 Local Time

The Armenian leadership is deliberately fanning noise around the
name of Ramil Safarov and covers around it in the current situation
in order to maintain the status quo.

The statement came from Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov at a
meeting held in Paris with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs, according
to Foreign Ministry spokesman Elman Abdullayev.

The spokesman said that the Azerbaijani minister informed the mediators
of the peace process that Safarov’s extradition from Hungary to
Azerbaijan and its pardon took place within the norms and principles
of international law and the law of Azerbaijan.

“Elmar Mammadyarov expressed that the Armenian leadership is
deliberately trying to hide behind the situation related to Ramil
Safarov to delay the negotiation process on the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict and preserve the status quo, leading to nowhere, which
further hardens the situation,” said Abdullayev.

Also the head of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry told the OSCE Minsk
Group co-chairs that the issue of Ramil Safarov cannot be viewed
outside the context of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict and the fact of occupation of Azerbaijani territories.

From: Baghdasarian

"Why Should Hungary Defend The Interests Of Gurgen Margaryan’s Legal

“WHY SHOULD HUNGARY DEFEND THE INTERESTS OF GURGEN MARGARYAN’S LEGAL SUCCESSOR, IF MY INTERESTS ARE NOT DEFENDED IN THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA?”

September 3, 2012 15:01

A few days ago, wrote about the noncontact confrontation
between Karen Hekimyan, the head of the Citizen Rights Protector NGO,
and Karen Andreasyan, the Human Rights Defender.

Let us remind that K. Hekimyan applied to Karen Andreasyan, the Human
Rights Defender, on May 23, asking him to record that his rights had
been violated and to take action to hold the violators accountable. He
raised the issue that 15 days after the parliamentary election
that had taken place on May 6, 2012, he noticed that the stamp with
inscription CEC (Central Election Commission) put on his passport by
the election commission of no. 12/03 polling station in Yerevan had
not disappeared. In regard to this, K. Hekimyan expressed an opinion
during a conversation with that the Human Rights Defender
just performed the functions of mailman and K. Andreasyan preferred
not to respond to the accusations against him.

After our article had been published, Karen Hekimyan received the
decision of the Human Rights Defender to cease considering his
complaint. During a conversation with , K. Hekimyan
expressed his annoyance presenting he following explanation of the
Human Rights Defender, “Unfortunately, the abilities given to the
Human Rights Defender in accordance with the Human Rights Defender
Act of the Republic of Armenia to solve the issue you have raised in
state bodies have been exhausted.”

In this regard, K. Hekimyan said, “The Human Rights Defender of the
Republic of Armenia expresses his regret on behalf of the Republic of
Armenia to me, a citizen of the Republic of Armenia, for the fact that
all abilities to defend my rights in my country have been exhausted.

And we talk about Hungary and Safarov. Why should Hungary defend
the interests of Gurgen Margaryan’s legal successor, if my interests
are not defended in the Republic of Armenia? This testifies to the
negligence of the Human Rights Defender. Can

you imagine Solzhenitsyn, Havel and Sakharov stating that they cannot
defend human rights anymore? The Human Rights Defender must defend
human rights, period.”

Our interlocutor thinks that it is a disgrace that the Human Rights
Defender refers to Article 15 of the Human Rights Defender Act of the
Republic of Armenia in his decision addressed to him stating that in
accordance with it, he ceases considering the complaint. Whereas K.

Hekimyan claims that the law reads something completely different and
remarks, “If a person doesn’t know what is written in that Article,
how can he protect human rights?”

According to K. Hekomyan’s observation, K. Andreasyan made a set of
other mistakes too. For example, Mr. Hekimyan applied only to the
Central Election Commission (CEC) to solve the issue, or made public
data he was aware of on one of the websites, the right to which he
didn’t have.

K. Hekimyan has filed a petition in the administrative court. Our
interlocutor mentioned what he demanded, in particular, “I want the
Human Rights Defender to defend human rights. There is no mention
in any article of the Constitution about exhausted abilities and
expressing regret to a person, what the Human Rights Defender wrote
is not legal.”

K. Hekimyan continues to claim that there are no mechanisms to hold
the Human Rights Defender accountable, in case of his negligence.

Therefore, K. Hekimyan also raises this issue – the compliance with
the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia.

Tatev HARUTYUNYAN

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.aravot.am/en/2012/09/03/105198/
www.aravot.am
www.aravot.am
www.aravot.am

Moscow Book Fair: Meeting Point Of Books And Readers

MOSCOW BOOK FAIR: MEETING POINT OF BOOKS AND READERS
Karina Ivashko

Voice of Russia

Sept 4 2012

Over 200,000 books in dozens of languages await their readers at the
Moscow International Book Fair 2012. It will run from September 5 -10.

This Autumn book-lovers will enjoy 1,500 participants from 60
countries. Some of them are coming for the publishing industry
networking and meeting their colleagues.

This year’s major theme is the Year of the Russian History since in
2012 Russia marks bicentenary of the victory in the War of 1812 and
its decisive Borodino Battle. France is the guest of honor this year.

Its bestselling authors Guillaume Musso, Charles Dantzig and super
popular Frederic Beigbeder will attend the event and the latter
will even play a DJ set at the BookMarket part of the Fair, says
Matthieu-M.Ardin, the head of l’Institut Francais de Moscou

“We expect a lot of meetings and discussions about new books,
publishing and the role of traditional books in the modern world.

We’ll also discuss a very topical issue -Napoleon in today’s cultural
life of France, Russia and the world.”

This year the Moscow Fair will have a lot of authors from Armenia
whose publishing industry turns 500 in 2012.

UNESCO has made Yerevan the 2012 World Book Capital. The Moscow Fair
will feature Russian and Armenian writers and translators to restore
book exchange which was rather poor in the last 20 years. Russia and
Armenia also plan to open national book stores in the two countries.

The Live Classics Association will bring Russian and international
writers to the Fair and has prepared other surprises, says the head
of the Association Marina Smirnova.

“The atmosphere will be amazing, we’ll have a 19th century stylization
with antiques and rarities. We have a contest “write a letter to a
writer” and a book swap.”

Every book has its history and has a power to change people which is
so important today.

From: Baghdasarian

http://english.ruvr.ru/2012_09_04/Moscow-Book-Fair-meeting-point-of-books-and-readers/

Film: Grandma’s Tattoos (Documentary)

GRANDMA’S TATTOOS (DOCUMENTARY)

Sri Lanka Guardian

Sept 4 2012

Written By Sri Lanka Guardian on September 4, 2012 | 12:05 PM

(September 04, 2012, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Filmmaker Suzanne
Khardalian makes a journey into her own family’s history to investigate
the terrible truth behind her grandmother’s odd tattoos and, in the
process, unveils the story of the Armenian women driven out of Ottoman
Turkey during the First World War.

During the First World War, millions of Armenians were forced out
of their homes in the then Ottoman empire, into the deserts of Syria
and Iraq.

More than a million people died in what Armenians describe as a
genocide, although Turkey rejects this accusation.

Everybody in the family seemed to know the story, but no-one ever
spoke about it.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.srilankaguardian.org/2012/09/grandmas-tattoos.html

Hungary Sees No Economic Background Of Safarov’s Extradition

HUNGARY SEES NO ECONOMIC BACKGROUND OF SAFAROV’S EXTRADITION

Vestnik Kavkaza
Sept 3 2012
Russia

Peter Siyarto, State Secretary for Foreign and Foreign Economic Policy
of the Hungarian prime minister, said that there is nothing in common
in extradition of Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan
and economic cooperation between the two states, APA reports.

Some media said that the officer was extradited for $2-3 billion
of investments.

Siyarto said that the extradition was carried out according to the
1983 International Strasbourg Convention on Extradition of Sentenced
Persons. Hungary extradites about 10-12 people, he adds.

From: Baghdasarian

Saving Lieutenant Safarov

SAVING LIEUTENANT SAFAROV

Vestnik Kavkaza
Sept 3 2012
Russia

Author: Mikhail Belyayev, exclusively to VK

The last day of summer was marked for Azerbaijan and Armenia by
an event which caused a storm of jubilation in Baku and a highly
emotional reaction, bordering on hysteria, in Yerevan. On the morning
of July 31, Azerbaijani news portals published the following news:
Hungary had extradited to Azerbaijan Lieutenant Ramil Safarov, who
was formerly sentenced to life imprisonment by a Hungarian court for
the murder of Gurgen Markarian.

Initially, not everyone believed in this news. However, after a couple
of hours the information was confirmed by Azerbaijani officials: the
officer actually was returned to his homeland. At the airport, Safarov
found out about the decree of President Ilham Aliyev, who pardoned
the officer. In addition, the Ministry of Defense gave the rank of
Major to the freed soldier, and he was paid a salary for the time he
was in custody. In addition, the Ministry granted him an apartment.

The exemption of Safarov was a complete surprise to the public in
Azerbaijan: there was no advance preparation for the return of Safarov
to the country. There was not even any “leak” in the opposition media.

Government sources later explained that the negotiations with
the Hungarian side on the fate of Safarov were conducted in
strict confidence, because there were serious concerns that the
negotiations could be prevented from outside. “For almost a year,
under the strict control of the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev,
secret negotiations and correspondence took place, including with the
law enforcement agencies in Hungary. An agreement reached during the
visit of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban to Azerbaijan played
a decisive role in this,” the head of the Department of External
Relations of the presidential administration of Azerbaijan, Novruz
Mammadov, told the media, commenting on the extradition to Azerbaijan
and the pardon of Safarov, who had been convicted by a Hungarian
court to life imprisonment.

35-year-old Safarov, who participated in one of NATO programs in
Hungary in 2004, was accused of the murder of the Armenian officer
Gurgen Margaryan, who, according to him, had insulted the Azerbaijani
flag. By the verdict of the Hungarian court, Safarov was sentenced to
life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for 30 years. The
case was of a pronounced emotional color: Safarov himself experienced
exile from his native land and the loss of family members killed by
the Armenian military. At the trial the officer did not repent his
crime, and therefore the sentence was harsh.

Since then, the Azerbaijani side has attempted to extradite Safarov
home, and each time to no avail. Only now, after 8 years, was Baku
able to rescue the officer from a Hungarian prison. Here, perhaps,
the most interesting part of the story began, which has already
acquired the character of an international scandal.

Undoubtedly, the vast majority of Azerbaijani citizens welcomed the
return of Safarov to his homeland and his pardon. This is confirmed
by the analysis of the content of the views of Azerbaijani users of
social networks, and the fact that jubilant people went out on the
streets to celebrate the release of the officer, and many of them went
to see Safarov and to meet with him personally. Such a reaction, which
Yerevan is now trying to put down to barbarism and rampant nationalism,
is understandable and natural, given the current realities in the
region. Azerbaijan is in a state of war with Armenia, there are over
a million refugees and internally-displaced people in the country,
and one fifth of its territory is occupied by Armenian armed forces:
it would be naive to believe that in Azerbaijan in such circumstances
as Safarov’s action would be considered to be a crime.

It is noteworthy that in Armenia a member of the terrorist organization
ASALA, Monte Melkonyan, is considered a national hero; he is guilty
of the murder of peaceful Turkish and Azerbaijani citizens.

Melkonyan, who organized the capture of the Turkish Consulate in Paris,
during which the consul Inal was seriously wounded, and a security
official Ozen was killed, was eliminated by Azerbaijani intelligence
during the Karabakh war. He was posthumously awarded the title of
National Hero of Armenia, and a school and a university in Yerevan
are named after him, as well as a unit of the Armenian army.

Against this background, such an hysterical response to the delight
of the Azerbaijani public to mark the liberation of Ramil Safarov is
at best hypocrisy.

The Armenian leadership did not expect Ramil Safarov to be extradited
to Azerbaijan. In this regard, President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan
spoke at an emergency meeting with the heads of diplomatic missions
accredited in Armenia and heads of international organizations, where
he very emotionally announced the termination of diplomatic relations
with Hungary. “The joint actions of the authorities of Hungary and
Azerbaijan have opened the door for the recurrence of such crimes.

With this decision, they send a signal to murderers. They now know
that murder motivated by ethnic or religious hatred can go unpunished.

I cannot tolerate this! Armenia cannot tolerate this! The Armenian
people will not forgive this! I officially announce that today we
are suspending diplomatic relations and official relations with
Hungary,” the Armenian president said. The same day, a crowd of
angry protesters threw tomatoes at the Honorary Consulate of Hungary
in Yerevan and destroyed the Hungarian flag. The Hungarian Foreign
Ministry expressed regret at the rupture of diplomatic relations
with Armenia, not failing to mention that the country had acted in
accordance with the European Convention.

Sargsyan was no less emotional at the emergency meeting of the Security
Council of Armenia: “You know what happened: the nothing that killed
Gurgen Margaryan has been returned by the Hungarian authorities to
Azerbaijan, and the Azerbaijani President pardoned this killer.

Naturally, we cannot accept this, and we must determine our future
actions.” At the end of the meeting, Sargsyan asked NSS Director
Gorik Hakobyan “to stay for a special order”. What kind of instruction
Sargsyan could give to the NSS in connection with the release of Ramil
Safarov is anyone’s guess. One thing is clear: the Armenian president
will now employ harsh rhetoric, trying to distract the public from
another aspect of the extradition of Safarov, inconvenient for him:
whatever emotional cues might sound today in Yerevan, the decision
of the Hungarian authorities to extradite the convicted officer
to Azerbaijan is a serious foreign policy failure of Yerevan. And
the most unpleasant point for Serzh Sargsyan is the fact that the
current ruling team, headed by the President of the Republic, is
responsible for this failure, because it was not able to mobilize
Armenian diplomacy, to use the resources of the Armenian lobby and
prevent the return home of the Azerbaijani officer, after which he
was quite predictably pardoned by President Ilham Aliyev. Moreover,
the reaction of Yerevan hardly came as a surprise to Baku. The focus
of the Azerbaijani public today is on other events related to the
“Safarov affair,” in particular, the reaction of third countries.

The first evaluations and comments in response to the extradition
and pardon of Safarov sounded from Washington. The administration of
the U.S. President made the following statement: “President Obama is
deeply concerned about the decision of the President of Azerbaijan
about Ramil Safarov’s pardon after his return from Hungary. Safarov
recognized that he had killed Gurgen Magaryan in Budapest in 2004 and
was serving a life sentence in Hungary for this murder. We informed
the Azerbaijani authorities about our disappointment with the decision
to pardon Safarov. This move is contrary to the current efforts to
restrict regional tensions and promote reconciliation. The United
States also is waiting for an explanation from Hungary regarding its
decision to extradite Safarov to Azerbaijan.”

Baku reacted very cautiously and calmly. According to many in
Azerbaijan, if the White House is so zealously concerned about regional
reconciliation, it should also condemn regular military exercises of
the Armenian army in the occupied Azerbaijani territories, which also
do not contribute to reducing tensions in the conflict zone.

The head of the Foreign Relations Department of the Presidential
Administration, Novruz Mammadov, said in an interview to 1news that
the extradition of Safarov is the subject of bilateral relations
between Azerbaijan and Hungary and is implemented in the framework
of international law. “Therefore, Azerbaijan will not give any
explanation to any country on this issue,” Mammadov said. Fuad
Alasgarov, the head of the department on work with law enforcement
agencies of the presidential administration, told the Azerbaijani
media the legal side of the issue: “The procedure for the transfer of
sentenced persons to serve their sentence is governed by the European
Convention on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons, adopted by the Council
of Europe in 1983. Hungary and the Republic of Azerbaijan ratified
this Convention. According to this Convention, a person convicted
in one of the contracting parties may be transferred to the other
contracting party to serve his sentence. Regarding the pardon of
Safarov, we should clarify that the sentence of the Hungarian court
limited only the ability of early release of the convicted person,
within 30 years from the date of sentencing. This restriction does not
apply to the possibility of pardon or amnesty of the convicted person.

Ramil Safarov was detained on 19 February 2004, that is, he served more
than eight and a half years of his sentence. The act of pardon should
be viewed as a substitute for a life sentence to the sentence that the
convict has already served. Accordingly, Ramil Safarov was released.”

The Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan also commented on the statement of
the White House: “It is surprising that the U.S. government interferes
in the relations of two independent states – Azerbaijan and Hungary.

The issue of the transfer of Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov to
Azerbaijan from Hungary came under the laws of the two countries. We
also understand that the American position is connected with the
domestic political context prior to the elections in the United
States.” The last remark deserves special attention. The Azerbaijani
Foreign Ministry transparently recalls that this statement, negative
for Azerbaijan in form and substance, is no more than a nod to the
Armenian lobby, after which radical foreign policy moves are unlikely
to follow. In fact, given the fact that the U.S. presidential race
is in full swing, such a step by the Obama administration is quite
understandable. At the same time, we can almost certainly say that
Washington will not go beyond statements and will hardly jeopardize
the growing strategic partnership with Azerbaijan, built on the
pragmatic interest of the United States. Here, in particular, the
matter is the collaboration in the context of the Iranian nuclear
program and the energy security of Europe. Clearly, the U.S. will
not risk long-term cooperation with Azerbaijan in favor of short-term
domestic political interests.

Finally, both in Azerbaijan and abroad, everybody is aware that
the release of Ramil Safarov is a strong move for Baku. Even if now
Azerbaijan will face international criticism due to the pardon of
Ramil Safarov, the political effect of this step is difficult to
overestimate.

Firstly, the demonstration of the increased influence of Azerbaijan
was very convincing.

Secondly, achieving the extradition and pardon of Safarov, the
president made foreign partners understand that it is useless to expect
softness from Azerbaijan on the issue of the conflict with Armenia.

Thirdly, it is an important political message: Azerbaijan does not
betray its people.

Fourthly, the release of Ramil Safarov and the very cool-headed
response to the criticism from abroad is a strong move by the current
government, taking into account the upcoming 2013 presidential
election. The president, among other things, made it clear that the
opinions and expectations of the people for him are more important
than the possible negative reaction from the outside.

Of course, something else is also clear: the fact that Safarov has been
pardoned will continue to be used in the information war of Armenia
against Azerbaijan in the future. After all, according to Zhvanetski,
“the best alibi is to be the victim.” The fact that Armenia learned
this simple truth well is beyond doubt. “The image of the victim” has
been exploited here for decades. But though Yerevan tries to extract
its propaganda dividends from the “Safarov affair” today, the decision
of the authorities of Hungary was a too clear demonstration that the
balance of power in Europe is not shifting in favour of Armenia.

From: Baghdasarian

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/30951.html

Granting Pardon To Murderer – Lawsuit To Hague Court – FAAE

GRANTING PARDON TO MURDERER – LAWSUIT TO HAGUE COURT – FAAE

news.am
September 03, 2012 | 17:53

YEREVAN. – In response to granting pardon to the Azerbaijani
murderer, Armenia should file a lawsuit to Hague court for Turkey’s
and Azerbaijan’s crimes against the Armenian nation, the Forum of
Armenian Associations of Europe (FAAE) statement reads.

The Azerbaijani actions during the whole XX century should be
considered as a program of genocide, the consequences of which include
depopulation of the Armenians from Nachijevan, as well as the war in
Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh]. In addition, actions by the Azerbaijani
and Hungarian authorities should be appealed in the European Court
of Human Rights.

From: Baghdasarian