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Twenty-Five Years Ago, Sumgait Became Scene Of Bloody Anti-Armenian

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  • Twenty-Five Years Ago, Sumgait Became Scene Of Bloody Anti-Armenian

    TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, SUMGAIT BECAME SCENE OF BLOODY ANTI-ARMENIAN RIOTS

    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/02/28/voice-of-russia/
    18:34 28/02/2013 " SOCIETY

    Twenty-five years ago, the seaside town of Sumgait in Azerbaijan, then
    part of the Soviet Union, became the scene of bloody anti-Armenian
    riots in which at least 32 ethnic Armenians were killed, according
    to the official estimates, although some sources say that the real
    figure is much higher, the article of The Voice of Russia reads.

    Radio station says, that a week before the riots, on February 20,
    1988, the parliament of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region
    with the predominately Armenian population petitioned to Moscow to
    be allowed to reunite with Armenia. That was the beginning of the
    ongoing territorial dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, which led to a
    full-scale war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1991-1994.

    When the Sumgait pogroms broke out, the authorities first branded
    them as hooliganism and did not intervene. Troops were brought in only
    the following day but observed neutrality until they themselves were
    attacked by rioters. Tougher measures followed. The riots were quelled
    and a curfew imposed. Within days, however, anti-Armenian violence
    swept Baku, Kirovabad, Hanlar and other Azerbaijani cities. The
    conflict snowballed and in 1990 the Karabakh war began.

    The article says that tens of thousands were killed and hundreds of
    thousands became refugees. In May 1994, an indefinite ceasefire was
    signed, putting an end to the bloodshed. A quarter of a century since,
    that ceasefire still holds.

    The Sumgait events were the first symptoms of the looming collapse of
    the USSR, says Alexander Krylov, a Caucasus expert at the Institute
    of World Economy and International Relations. "The central government
    was in a deep crisis and losing control at all levels - republican,
    regional and nationwide. And bursting from beneath were destructive
    processes as nationalistic-minded forces sought to achieve their
    goals. In Azerbaijan, it led to violence in Sumgait and other cities."

    Political scientist Stanislav Tarasov thinks that Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict can be resolved, though not in the near future. "There were
    other forces playing in the region and destabilizing the situation.

    And now a solution looks more promising than ever. The first
    scenario is that both sides will demonstrate good will and opt
    for peaceful coexistence. But the current policies of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan make that scenario unlikely. It is also possible that,
    given the geopolitical fragmentation of the region, the independence
    of Nagorno-Karabakh may, after all, eventually be recognized."

    The Voice of Russia says that the Sumgait tragedy was mentioned at a UN
    Security Council meeting this week. Top UN officials highlighted the
    need for joint efforts to protect civilian in armed conflicts. The
    Armenian side reaffirmed its commitment to settling the Karabakh
    conflict peacefully and in keeping with international law.

    On 26-29 February 1988 in terms of actual complicity of local
    authorities and inaction of the USSR government mass pogroms
    of civilians were organized in Sumgait city of Azerbaijani SSR,
    accompanied with unprecedented brutal murders, violence and pillaging
    against the Armenian population of the city. Armenian pogroms in
    Sumgait were carefully organized. At the meetings, which began on
    February 26 in the central square, city leaders openly called for
    violence against the Armenians.

    On February 27 protests which were attended by hundreds of rioters
    turned into violence. Armed with axes, knives, specially sharpened
    rebar, rocks and cans of gasoline and with the pre-compiled lists of
    apartments where Armenians lived the rioters broke into the houses,
    turning everything upside down there and killing the owners. In
    the same time, people were often taken out to the streets or to the
    courtyard for jeering at them publicly. After painful humiliations
    and torture the victims were doused with gasoline and burnt alive.

    On February 29 army troops entered Sumgait but without an order to
    intervene. Only in the evening, when the mad crowd began to attack
    the soldiers the military units took up decisive steps.

    The exact number of victims of Sumgait pogroms is still unknown.

    According to official data, 32 people were killed; however there
    is ample evidence that several hundred Armenians have been killed
    in the city in three days. There is also evidence that the riots
    were coordinated by KGB in Azerbaijan. Executioners of Sumgait were
    subsequently declared as national heroes of Azerbaijan.

    Documentary "Ordinary Genocide: Sumgait 1988"
    http://karabakhrecords.info/gallery/an-ordinary-genocide-sumgait-february-1988-eng/

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