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Khojali Tragedy In The Light Of Ilham Aiyev's Policy Of Lies

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  • Khojali Tragedy In The Light Of Ilham Aiyev's Policy Of Lies

    KHOJALI TRAGEDY IN THE LIGHT OF ILHAM AIYEV'S POLICY OF LIES
    By Ivan Gharibyan

    news.am
    Feb 26 2010
    Armenia

    Today is the 18th anniversary of the tragedy in Khojali (Xocali),
    which is one of the bloody chapters of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    As a rule, the tragedy has become a subject for political maneuvers by
    the Azerbaijani propaganda machinery, which has always been following
    the principles of lie and distortion of facts.

    The Khojali tragedy has become an instrument for propaganda at the
    Aliyev clan's disposal. Executing the clan's orders, the Azerbaijani
    mass media keep on creating an image of Armenians as "inhuman monsters
    that committed genocide in Khojali." For the only purpose of spiting
    Armenians, Azerbaijanis have been seeking to play genocide victims
    for almost 20 years. However, the Baku propagandists' overwhelming
    desire to exaggerate and lay the blame on the Armenians has made them
    so blind that they have got entangled in their own lies by showing
    pictures of dead bodies that have nothing in common with the tragic
    events on February 26, 1992.

    In many respects, the domestic political situation in Azerbaijan
    accounted for the tragic events in Khojali, as well as for the pogroms
    in Baku and Sumgait. In that case, it was the confrontation between
    the then post-Soviet authorities of Azerbaijan led by Ayaz Mutalibov
    and the Popular Front of Azerbaijan (PFA), which was seeking power at
    any cost. So the nationalist-fascist PFA had no problem in provoking
    - immediately or indirectly -- a massacre of the Azeri population in
    the region. The main aim was overthrowing Mutalibov, was it not?

    Azerbaijan's first President was expelled from the country, his name
    is taboo there now or, even if it is mentioned, it is only in the
    context of "betrayal of national interests." The reason is clear:
    in his interview with Nezavisimaya Gazeta on April 2, 1992, the then
    Azerbaijani leader refuted the official interpretation of the tragic
    events in Khojali.

    "The Khojali residents that survived tell that everything was organized
    to cause me to resign. A certain force was working to discredit the
    President. I do not think that Armenians, who expertly deal with such
    situations, could allow Azerbaijanis to get documents exposing their
    cruel actions. I suppose that some people were concerned with that in
    order to show the pictures at the session of the Supreme Soviet and
    have me come into focus. If I state it is the Azerbaijani Opposition
    that is to blame, they can say I am slandering them. But the general
    context is that the Armenians left a corridor for people to leave
    the place. Why on earth should they fire?

    Especially near Agdam, where sufficient armed forces were stationed
    and could help the people. Or they could have arranged for civilians
    to go. That was standard practice." Those are Ayaz Mutalibov's own
    words. Mutalibov, who was then President of Azerbaijan, was much better
    informed of the events than the "national leader" Heydar Aliyev,
    who had lived in Moscow for years and settled down in Nakhchevan,
    Azerbaijan - to say nothing of the "crown price" Ilham.

    For almost 17 years the Aliyev clan has been spreading lies and
    slander on the events on February 26, 1992.

    The very tales about the "Khojali genocide" are most natural in the
    context of the Azerbaijani propaganda machinery's style. Yes, they
    had to "counterbalance" the Armenian pogroms in Sumgait, Kirovabad,
    Baku, as well as ethnic cleansing throughout Azerbaijan, even the
    deportation of all the Armenians from the Shahumyan region.

    So the Azerbaijanis killed in Khojali because of the war unleashed by
    Azerbaijan, and because of domestic political struggle in that country,
    were fated to become the last card to play by the Aliyev clan, which
    has beaten all the records for historical falsifications.

    The civilians that were killed in Khojhali on February 26, 1992, fell
    victim to the war Azerbaijan unleashed, but was doomed to lose. All
    attempts to distort facts for the purpose of consolidating the Aliyevs'
    "hereditary monarchy" will hardly rest their souls.
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