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  • Ethnic Cleansing in Progress

    Ethnic Cleansing in Progress
    War in Nagorno Karabakh

    http://www.maragha.nk.am/documentseng4.h tml

    By
    Caroline Cox
    and
    John Aijbner

    with a preface
    by Elena Bonner Sakharov

    Institute for Religious Minorities in the Islamic World

    Zurich. London, Washington 1993


    APPENDIX

    MARAGHA: The name of this village is associated with a massacre which
    never reached the world's headlines, although at least 45 Armenians
    died cruel deaths. During the CSI mission to Nagomo Karabakh in April,
    news came through that a village in the north, in Mardakert region,
    had been overrun by Azeri-Turks on April 10 and there had been a
    number of civilians killed. A group went to obtain evidcn ce and found
    a village with survivors in a state of shock, their bum-out homes
    still smouldering, charred remains of corpses and vertebrae still on
    the ground, where people had their heads sawn off, and their bodies
    burnt in front of their families. 45 people had been massacred and 100
    were missing, possibly suffering a fate worse than death. In order to
    verify the stories, the delegation asked the villagers if they would
    exhume the bodies'which they had already buried. In great anguish,
    they did so, allowing photographs to be taken of the the decapitated,
    charred bodies. Later, when asked about publicising about this
    tragedy, theyreplied they were reluctant to do so as "we Armenians are
    not very good at showing our grief to the world".
    We believe it is important to put on record these events and the way
    in which they have, or have not, been interpreted and port rayed by
    the people themselves, and by the international media. International
    public opinion is inevitably shaped by media coverage and lost a great
    deal of political support as a result of their alleged behavior at
    Khodjaly. The international media did not cover the massacre of the
    Armenians at Maragha at all. Consequently, in the eyes of the world,
    the armed forces of the Armenians of Nagomo Karabakh have been made to
    appear more brutal then those of the Az eri-Turks; in reality,
    evidence suggests that the opposite is more likely to be true.
    Source: Ethnic Cleansing in Progress, War in Nagomo Karabakh, by
    Caroline Cox and John Eibner, Institute for Religious Minorities in
    the Islamic World, Zurich, London, Washington , 1993.



    Maragha: The name of this village is associated with a massacre which
    never reached the world's headlines, although at least 45 Armenians
    died cruel deaths. During the CS1 mission to Nagorno Karabakh in
    April, news came through that a village in the north, in Mardskert
    region, had been overrun by Azeri-Turks on April 10 and there had been
    a number of civilians killed. A group went to obtain evidence and
    found a village with sur - vivors in a state of shock, their burnt-out
    homes still smouldering, charred remains of corpses and vertebrae
    still on the ground, where people had their heads sawn off, and their
    bodies burnt in front of their families. 45 people had been massacred
    and 100 were miss - ing, possibly suffering a fate worse than death In
    order to verify the stories, the delega - tion asked the villagers if
    they would exhume the bodies which they had already buried. In great
    anguish, they did so, allowing photographs to be taken of the
    decapitated, charred bodies. Later, when asked about publicising about
    this tragedy, they replied they were reluctant to do so as "we
    Armenians are not very good at showing our grief to the world". We
    believe ii is important to put on record these events and the way in
    which they have, or have not, been interpreted and portrayed by the
    people themselves, and by the interna - tional media. International
    public opinion is inevitably shaped by media coverage and the
    Azeri-Turks certainly won great sympathy through their presentation of
    the 'Khodjaly massacre'. Conversely, the Armenians received much
    criticism and lost a great deal of political support as a result of
    their alleged behaviour at Khodjaly. The international media did not
    cover the massacre of the Armenians at Maragha at all. Consequently,
    in the eyes of the world, the armed forces of the Armenians of Nagorno
    Karabakh have been made to appear more brutal than those of the
    Azeri-Turks; in reality, evidence suggests that the opposite is more
    likely to be true.



    `Our fight will not just end in itself'-says president of the Karabagh
    National Assembly foreign relations committee Vahram Atanesyan
    Anahit DANIELYAN | April 14, 2006


    We can't consider the tragedy in Maragha as a war because Maragha was
    not a military post, but rather a peaceful settlement. It should be
    considered as a crime against humanity for which there is no
    expiration date for punishment and the perpetrators must be brought to
    justice sooner or later by Karabagh, as well as the international
    community. This was what president of the Karabagh National Assembly
    foreign relations committee Vahran Atanesyan said on April 10 during a
    press conference dedicated to the `Tragic events in Maragh on April
    10, 1992'. In his speech, V. Atanesyan said that in 1992, in the early
    hours of the morning at 5 a.m., the Maragha village located in the
    Martakert region of Karabagh was attacked by missiles sent from
    Azerbaijan's Mirbashir region (present day Tartar region) for three
    hours. Afterwards, Azerbaijani armed forces, which were supported by
    the subdivision of the 4th army of Gyanja allocated in Azerbaijan by
    the former Soviet Union, invaded the Maragha village and massacred the
    people living there. Nearly 100 people died, mainly women, children
    and elderly. The Azerbaijani armed forces took tens of hundreds of
    hostages with them as they left the village, some of which managed to
    escape while the rest remain missing (According to V. Atanesyan, there
    are about 30 missing hostages). `As of April 10, 1992, there were more
    than 3,000 people living in Maragha. Currently, only 300 people who
    have survived the massacres live in the Nor Maragha village. In other
    words, more than 2 and a half thousand people are living abroad and
    don't have the opportunity to come back to their homeland. The Maragha
    village is currently under the control of Azerbaijani armed forces, as
    well as the villages of Margushavan, Karmiravan, Seysula, etc. The
    Karabagh authorities have stated that the Karabagh conflict resolution
    must include Karabagh's territorial integrity, especially the northern
    section of the Martakert region, which has been the region with the
    most agriculture and one of the most developed substructures of the
    republic. As a result of the tragic events in Maragha and the war in
    progress, five wine factories, nearly 30,000 vineyards have been
    destroyed, and the mother water route of Karabagh has also been
    ruined,' says Vahram. V. Atanesyan also said with a feeling of pity
    that Armenia hadn't done anything about the economic losses caused by
    Azerbaijan, as well as the evidence of the tragic crime committed by
    the Azerbaijani authorities and the armed forces. Recently, Karabagh's
    National Assembly has formed a temporary committee on reviewing the
    facts of the actual crime. V. Atanesyan hopes that the committee will
    be able to summarize the tragic events in Maragha before the end of
    the year, as well as present the facts of the atrocities committed in
    the territory of Karabagh to Armenian society, the international
    community, as well as the parliaments of the member countries of the
    OSCE Minsk Group. Atanesyan says that this must be done within the
    framework of Azerbaijan's efforts to bring cases against spies of the
    Karabagh Defense Army and several significant individuals who fought
    in the Karabagh liberation war. `We must be ready to present the facts
    to the international community not as a counterattack to Azerbaijan's
    anti-propaganda, but so that the international community will know
    who, when and how were the people massacred and who was it that
    decided to took advantage of the war in order to organize
    ethnic-cleansing. Azerbaijan has led this kind of politics for years
    through peace when Karabagh was still located in Azerbaijan as an
    autonomous region. This politics reached the climax in 1991, when
    Azerbaijan let go of the opportunity to solve matters peacefully with
    the people of Karabagh and declared a war on Karabagh. So, the attacks
    on the border shouldn't be looked at as the result of the politics led
    by the Karabagh authorities, but rather as the result of Azerbaijan's
    aggression and keeping the people of Karabagh under foreign control as
    a means of defending the country. If we have the studies conducted by
    the National Assembly temporary committee, we can then present them to
    the international community and start the propaganda so that the
    international community also knows about Karabagh's
    national-liberation struggle. Basically, the fact that the Karabagh
    conflict may be an honor for Azerbaijan, while it is a question of
    survival on the homeland for the people of Karabagh,' said the
    president of the Karabagh National Assembly foreign relations
    committee. During the conference, the `Koltso' war was also touched
    upon and according to V. Atanesyan, both the National Assembly and the
    political parties must organize events to the 15th anniversary of the
    war. `I don't think that we have the chance today to bring the
    perpetrators to justice, but if we are going towards international
    recognition of Karabagh's independence, then we must start raising the
    issue by announcing the names of the perpetrators one by one,
    especially since it's no secret to anyone. These issues must not only
    be raised by announcements, but also by an official document,
    especially since today there are people living in Karabagh who have
    experienced living in those concentration camps, have been arrested as
    a result of the `Koltso' war and have been kept as prisoners in
    different prisons around Azerbaijan. There are even people who have
    been sentenced by Azerbaijani courts, but have later been released and
    turned into military hostages. We must also collect evidence regarding
    those people, analyze it and have an official document, which will
    help us prove that this struggle does not end in itself, that it
    started in our homeland in order to defend our right to live. We have
    not and aren't digging a hole for ourselves. The only guarantee that
    we have to live here peacefully is the self-defense of our country
    with its security and national attributes,' said the president of the
    committee in closing. http://www.168.am/en/articles/2070-pr



    13 YEARS HAVE PASSED SINCE THE MARAGHA TRAGEDY

    [07:36 pm] 11 April, 2005

    The events of thirteen years' prescription in the village of Maragha
    of the NKR Martakert region occupy a special place by the depth of
    human tragedy, the level of cruelty, the number of people exposed to
    violence and captured. On April 10, 1992, as a result of the
    Azerbaijani regular army units' attack the village was basically
    destroyed. According to various data, from 53 to 100 peaceful
    inhabitants were brutally killed, including 30 women, 20 of them of
    declining years. Their bodies were mutilated, beheaded, divided and
    burnt. 53 peaceful people were captured, including 9 children, 29
    women (about 3 tens of hostages were then killed in the Azerbaijani
    captivity). After 2 weeks Maragha was again attacked, the population
    deported, the houses robbed, many of them burnt. The deportation of
    the population was accompanied with the acts of violence and
    humiliation. The observers note the events in Maragha also in the
    context that the violence on the peaceful population was made in the
    frames of military operation by a concrete military unit. It was not
    accidentally that the majority of the hostages appeared in private
    houses of the servicemen of the Interior Ministry, Defense Ministry,
    Detachments of Militia of Special Assignment, etc. The destiny of many
    hostages is not known yet. Baroness Karoline Cox, who had visited the
    place of the tragedy, was shocked to the innermost of her heart by
    what she had seen. «They are not of human race» - the Baroness so
    spoke of the DMSA servicemen who had carried out the slaughter.

    http://www.a1plus.am/en/?page=issue&am p;id=26975



    AZG Armenian Daily #037, 01/03/2006
    Karabakh diary


    PROVISIONAL COMMISSION IS NOT THERE TO DEMAND WAR INDEMNITY

    At the last session of the NKR parliament the lawmakers passed a law
    on setting up a provisional commission to study the Azerbaijani
    violence against the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh in the period of
    1988-1992. This decision is dictated by the need to present
    Azerbaijan's illegal acts before the world community, particularly the
    OSCE Minsk Group and the PACE. The author of this initiative was
    Vahram Atanesian, head of the Foreign Relations Committee of the
    parliament. Mr. Atanesian told daily Azg that the commission will work
    till the end of the year and the materials it will gather during this
    period will be sent to international structures as well as will be
    posted on the Internet. Suchlike commission was set up in June 12 1992
    too but it did not function because of the war and later because of
    the sensitiveness of the peace talks. As today the sides discuss
    humanitarian aspects of the conflict, the parliament sees it rightful
    to present to the world community the massacre of Maragha in 1992, the
    take-over of part of Shahumian and Martaker regions and the
    humanitarian crisis that it incited. The most essential though will be
    the study of notorious "Koltso" operation on May 15 1991 organized by
    the State Emergency Committee. Mr. Atanesian reminded that at one
    point in time Russia's Supreme Council also organized hearings on
    "Koltso" operation. The researches of the provisional commission by no
    means aim at demanding war indemnity from Azerbaijan, as it is not
    within the parliament's power. Vahram Atanesian thinks that the
    government of Nagorno Karabakh has also to put before the world
    community all facts of violence against the Azeri inhabitants of
    Karabakh and the fact of considering them "second-rate citizens" of
    the country. The parliamentarian explained that in exchange for the
    evacuated Azeri population from Karabakh's Azeri villages, Baku
    authorities sent special militia units, terrorists and outlaws. He
    assured that there are materials and videotapes to prove this.

    By Kim Gabrielian in Stepanakert




    Magazine: Christianity Today, April 1998 Vol. 42, No. 5

    SURVIVORS OF THE MARAGHAR MASSACRE:IT WAS TRULY LIKE A CONTEMPORARY
    GOLGOTHA MANY TIMES OVER
    By Baroness Caroline Cox of Queensbury


    The ancient kingdom of Armenia was the first nation to embrace
    Christianity - in AD 301. Modern Armenia, formerly a Soviet republic,
    declared autonomy in September 1991 and today exists as a member of
    the Commonwealth of Independent States. There you find many of the
    oldest churches in the world, and a people who have upheld the faith
    for nearly 1,700 years, often at great cost. Nowhere has the cost been
    greater than in the little piece of ancient Armenia called
    Nagorno-Karabakh, cruelly cut off from the rest of Armenia by Stalin
    in 1921, and isolated today as a Christian enclave within Islamic
    Azerbaijan. Only 100 miles north to south, 50 miles east to west,
    there are mountains, forests, fertile valleys, and an abundance of
    ancient churches, monasteries, and beautifully carved stone crosses
    dating from the fourth century. This paradise became hell in 1991.
    Vying with Armenia for control of this enclave, Azerbaijan began a
    policy of ethnic cleansing of the Armenians of Karabakh, and 150,000
    Armenians were forced to fight for the right to live in their historic
    homeland. It was a war against impossible odds: 7 million-strong
    Azerbaijan, helped by Turkey and, at one stage, several thousand
    mujahideen mercenaries. On April 10, 1992, forces from Azerbaijan
    attacked the Armenian village of Maraghar in northeastern Karabakh.
    The villagers awoke at 7 a.m. to the sound of heavy shelling; then
    tanks rolled in, followed by infantry, followed by civilians with
    pick-up trucks to take home the pickings of the looting they knew
    would follow the eviction of the villagers. Azeri soldiers sawed off
    the heads of 45 villagers, burnt others, took 100 women and children
    away as hostages, looted and set fire to all the homes, and left with
    all the pickings from the looting. I, along with my team from
    Christian Solidarity Worldwide, arrived within hours to find homes
    still smoldering, decapitated corpses, charred human remains, and
    survivors in shock. This was truly like a contemporary Golgotha many
    times over. I visited the nearby hospital and met the chief nurse.
    Hours before, she had seen her son's head sawn off, and she had lost
    14 members of her extended family. I wept with her: there could be no
    words. With the fragile cease-fire that began in May 1994, we have
    been able to visit survivors of the massacre at Maraghar. Unable to
    return to their village, which is still in Azeri hands, they are
    building "New Maraghar" in the devastated ruins of another village.
    Their "homes" are empty shells with no roofs, doors, or windows, but
    their priority was the building of a memorial to those who died in the
    massacre. We were greeted with the traditional Armenian ceremony of
    gifts of bread and salt. Then a dignified elderly lady made a speech
    of gracious welcome, with no hint of reference to personal suffering.
    She seemed so serene that I thought she had been away on that terrible
    day of the massacre. She replied: "As you have asked, I will tell you
    that my four sons were killed that morning, trying to defend us - but
    what could they do with hunting rifles against tanks? And then we saw
    things no human should ever have to see: heads that were too far from
    their bodies; people hacked into quarters like pigs. I also lost my
    daughter and her husband - we only found his bloodstained cap. We still
    don't know what happened to them. I now bring up their children. But
    they have forgotten the taste of milk, as the Azeris took all our
    cows." How can one respond to such suffering and such dignity? Since
    the cease-fire, we have undertaken a program to supply cows. On our
    last visit, we met this grandmother, and, smiling, she said: "Thank
    you. Our children now know the taste of milk." Nagorno-Karabakh is a
    place where we have found miracles of grace. The day of the massacre I
    asked the chief nurse, whose son had been beheaded, if she would like
    me to take a message to the rest of the world. She nodded, and I took
    out my notebook. With great dignity, she said: "I want to say, 'Thank
    you.' I am a nurse. I have seen how the medicines you have brought
    have saved many lives and eased much suffering. I just want to say,
    'Thank you,' to all those who have not forgotten us in these dark
    days."

    Baroness Cox of Queensbury is a defender of human rights in the
    House of Lords, United Kingdom, as well as a prominent educationalist
    and author. Baroness Cox was created a Life Peer in 1982 and has been
    Deputy Speaker of the British Parliament's House of Lords since 1985
    to the present. She is Chancellor of Bournemouth University and Vice
    President of the Royal College of Nursing and President of the
    Institute of Administrative Management. Baroness Cox is heavily
    involved with international humanitarian and human rights endeavours,
    serving as non-executive director of the Andrei Sakharov Foundation
    and as a trustee of MERLIN (Medical Emergency Relief International)
    and is the President of Christian Solidarity Worldwide (P.O. Box 99,
    New Malden, Surrey, KT3 3YF, England)

    http://www.cilicia.com/Maragha.htm




    S tatement
    by the Presidium of the Supreme Council
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic



    On April 10, whilst representatives of the Russian Federation and
    Islamic Republic of Iran were in Nagorno-Karabakh Republic with the
    mediation mission, the National Army of Azerbaijan following a
    sustained rocket and artillery bombardment made a massed attack with
    the support of armoured forces and occupied a part of the Armenian
    village, Maraga, in Martakert region. The enemy was repelled from the
    Maraga and over the NKR border following a counter attack by the NKR
    Forces of Defense. All inhabitants of the occupied part of the village
    were brutally killed, and their homes looted and burned. Up to now, 45
    corpses, mostly old men and women have been identified. The
    Azerbaijani leadership, motivated by political ambitions, continues
    large-scale armed operations against NKR to aid the process of
    electoral struggle. The peaceful population of Maraga village was
    barbarically killed, although there had not been any military
    necessity for such an event. This crime must not remain unpunished,
    and the leadership of the Republic of Azerbaijan bears full
    responsibility for the consequences of these actions.


    Stepanakert,
    12 April 1992

    http://www.nkr.am/eng/mid/press/zparl.htm



    A Soldier of Independence
    April 24, 2006


    In 1991 the Soviet Army and Azerbaijani military groupings were the
    masters of the situation in the Shahumyan region. Under these
    circumstances, Leonid and his comrades managed to carry out the
    self-defense of Armenian villages.

    The Liberation Army stood out compared to other military detachments
    for its discipline. In the course of four years and dozens of battles,
    Leonid lost six only soldiers. He trained his soldiers to be ready for
    every hardship. Smoking and drinking were strictly prohibited. There
    was no other detachment like this in Karabakh. His boys trained for
    eight hours a day. He was preparing soldiers for a regular army.

    Before combat he would always order, "Don't shoot at unarmed people,"
    and would add, "Don't shoot at fleeing soldiers either. Let them go."

    He gave that order the day the military station near the village of
    Aghdaban was destroyed. That same day the Azerbaijanis came and
    massacred the peaceful residents of the village of Maragha. Leonid and
    his unit rushed to Maragha. The enemy suffered heavy losses and
    retreated, leaving behind the villagers they had killed, dozens of
    mutilated bodies of children, women, and old people.

    Leonid admired the natural beauty of Karabakh and said, "Armenians
    have no sense of beauty; if they had they wouldn't have given up
    Karabakh, for that reason alone. Giving something so beautiful away to
    somebody else is a crime."

    Leonid's dream was to create a national army with a powerful Armenian
    state behind it. But the Army was taking shape slowly at that time.
    When we last met (it was after the opening of the Lachin corridor) he
    said, "These victories will come to nothing because there is no
    regular army behind them."

    He could not reconcile himself to the surrender of the Shahumyan
    region and parts of Martakert after the opening of the Lachin road.
    The fact that some soldiers left these regions before the residents
    did filled Leonid with rage. He said that they should be punished. He
    was planning to liberate Shahumyan with his soldiers.

    Leonid's best friend and his favorite soldier was the commander of the
    Artsakh Front unit of the Liberation Army, Vladimir Balayan.

    Leonid considered Vladimir a born military expert. Vladimir Balayan
    was killed on June 9, 1992 defending the village of Chailu in the
    Martakert region. That day Leonid's soldiers saw their commander
    crying like a baby for the first and last time.

    "He was killed, he went to the gods because they needed him there.
    Therefore, we have to defend our country so that he doesn't become a
    martyr. He is a victim, not a martyr," Leonid told the people who
    gathered for the funeral.

    After Vladimir's funeral, he didn't speak to anybody for two hours; he
    just stood by himself. Then he waved his hand and said, "I'll go and
    meet Vladimir there - in heaven."

    Twelve days later Leonid Azgaldyan was killed.

    On different occasions, Leonid used say, "The nation that loses
    Karabakh will be completely overthrown."

    Edik Baghdasaryan
    Photos by Frederic Karegin Tonolli, Myriam Gaume Guragossian, Sarkis Hatspanian




    Survivors of Maraghar massacre: It was truly like a contemporary
    Golgotha many times over


    The ancient kingdom of Armenia was the first nation to embrace
    Christianity - in AD 301. Modern Armenia, formerly a Soviet republic,
    declared autonomy in September 1991 and today exists as a member of
    the Commonwealth of Independent States. There you find many of the
    oldest churches in the world, and a people who have upheld the faith
    for nearly 1,700 years, often at great cost. Nowhere has the cost been
    greater than in the little piece of ancient Armenia called
    Nagorno-Karabakh, cruelly cut off from the rest of Armenia by Stalin
    in 1921, and isolated today as a Christian enclave within Islamic
    Azerbaijan. Only 100 miles north to south, 50 miles east to west,
    there are mountains, forests, fertile valleys, and an abundance of
    ancient churches, monasteries, and beautifully carved stone crosses
    dating from the fourth century. This paradise became hell in 1991.
    Vying with Armenia for control of this enclave, Azerbaijan began a
    policy of ethnic cleansing of the Armenians of Karabakh, and 150,000
    Armenians were forced to fight for the right to live in their historic
    homeland. It was a war against impossible odds: 7 million-strong
    Azerbaijan, helped by Turkey and, at one stage, several thousand
    mujahideen mercenaries. On April 10, 1992, forces from Azerbaijan
    attacked the Armenian village of Maraghar in northeastern Karabakh.
    The villagers awoke at 7 a.m. to the sound of heavy shelling; then
    tanks rolled in, followed by infantry, followed by civilians with
    pick-up trucks to take home the pickings of the looting they knew
    would follow the eviction of the villagers. Azeri soldiers sawed off
    the heads of 45 villagers, burnt others, took 100 women and children
    away as hostages, looted and set fire to all the homes, and left with
    all the pickings from the looting. I, along with my team from
    Christian Solidarity Worldwide, arrived within hours to find homes
    still smoldering, decapitated corpses, charred human remains, and
    survivors in shock. This was truly like a contemporary Golgotha many
    times over. I visited the nearby hospital and met the chief nurse.
    Hours before, she had seen her son's head sawn off, and she had lost
    14 members of her extended family. I wept with her: there could be no
    words. With the fragile cease-fire that began in May 1994, we have
    been able to visit survivors of the massacre at Maraghar. Unable to
    return to their village, which is still in Azeri hands, they are
    building "New Maraghar" in the devastated ruins of another village.
    Their "homes" are empty shells with no roofs, doors, or windows, but
    their priority was the building of a memorial to those who died in the
    massacre. We were greeted with the traditional Armenian ceremony of
    gifts of bread and salt. Then a dignified elderly lady made a speech
    of gracious welcome, with no hint of reference to personal suffering.
    She seemed so serene that I thought she had been away on that terrible
    day of the massacre. She replied: "As you have asked, I will tell you
    that my four sons were killed that morning, trying to defend us - but
    what could they do with hunting rifles against tanks? And then we saw
    things no human should ever have to see: heads that were too far from
    their bodies; people hacked into quarters like pigs. I also lost my
    daughter and her husband - we only found his bloodstained cap. We still
    don't know what happened to them. I now bring up their children. But
    they have forgotten the taste of milk, as the Azeris took all our
    cows." How can one respond to such suffering and such dignity? Since
    the cease-fire, we have undertaken a program to supply cows. On our
    last visit, we met this grandmother, and, smiling, she said: "Thank
    you. Our children now know the taste of milk." Nagorno-Karabakh is a
    place where we have found miracles of grace. The day of the massacre I
    asked the chief nurse, whose son had been beheaded, if she would like
    me to take a message to the rest of the world. She nodded, and I took
    out my notebook. With great dignity, she said: "I want to say, 'Thank
    you.' I am a nurse. I have seen how the medicines you have brought
    have saved many lives and eased much suffering. I just want to say,
    'Thank you,' to all those who have not forgotten us in these dark
    days."

    Baroness Caroline Cox
    April 1998


    http://sumgait.info/maraga/maraga-eng/survi vors-maraghar.htm




    THE TRAGEDY OF MARAGHA


    9 years ago - on April 10,1992, a tragedy, which, on different
    estimations, caused 49-53 victims, took place in the village of
    Maragha, Martakert region. 50 more people, including 9 children, were
    taken hostages. The fate of many of them still remains unknown. The
    Azerbaijani armed units - the OMON (militia units on special purpose)
    detachments, which, supported by twenty tanks, had entered Maragha,
    committed unprecedented by their cruelty crimes against peaceful
    villagers. The massacre was resumed on April 22-23, when the survived
    people of Maragha returned to bury the deceased ones. The facts on the
    victims of Maragha have been confirmed by different international
    human rights organizations, in particular, the organization Helsinki
    Watch. Caroline Cox, Viced-Speaker of the British Parliament's House
    of Lords, visiting the tragedy place, witnessed how in the fully
    destroyed village people were burying the remains of the cut up and
    sawed bodies, as well as burned alive - adults and children. Later,
    Baroness Cox described the atrocities of the Azerbaijanis in the
    village of Maragha in her book "Ethnic Cleansing Is Going On". The
    tragedy of Maragha is regarded as one of the most terrible examples of
    genocide.

    http://www.nkr.am/eng/mid/bull/text1 _01.html



    AZG Armenian Daily #037, 01/03/2006
    Karabakh diary


    PROVISIONAL COMMISSION IS NOT THERE TO DEMAND WAR INDEMNITY


    At the last session of the NKR parliament the lawmakers passed a law
    on setting up a provisional commission to study the Azerbaijani
    violence against the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh in the period of
    1988-1992. This decision is dictated by the need to present
    Azerbaijan's illegal acts before the world community, particularly the
    OSCE Minsk Group and the PACE. The author of this initiative was
    Vahram Atanesian, head of the Foreign Relations Committee of the
    parliament. Mr. Atanesian told daily Azg that the commission will work
    till the end of the year and the materials it will gather during this
    period will be sent to international structures as well as will be
    posted on the Internet. Suchlike commission was set up in June 12 1992
    too but it did not function because of the war and later because of
    the sensitiveness of the peace talks. As today the sides discuss
    humanitarian aspects of the conflict, the parliament sees it rightful
    to present to the world community the massacre of Maragha in 1992, the
    take-over of part of Shahumian and Martaker regions and the
    humanitarian crisis that it incited. The most essential though will be
    the study of notorious "Koltso" operation on May 15 1991 organized by
    the State Emergency Committee. Mr. Atanesian reminded that at one
    point in time Russia's Supreme Council also organized hearings on
    "Koltso" operation. The researches of the provisional commission by no
    means aim at demanding war indemnity from Azerbaijan, as it is not
    within the parliament's power. Vahram Atanesian thinks that the
    government of Nagorno Karabakh has also to put before the world
    community all facts of violence against the Azeri inhabitants of
    Karabakh and the fact of considering them "second-rate citizens" of
    the country. The parliamentarian explained that in exchange for the
    evacuated Azeri population from Karabakh's Azeri villages, Baku
    authorities sent special militia units, terrorists and outlaws. He
    assured that there are materials and videotapes to prove this.

    By Kim Gabrielian in Stepanakert
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