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BAKU: State Commission On POWs, Hostages And Missing Persons Express

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  • BAKU: State Commission On POWs, Hostages And Missing Persons Express

    STATE COMMISSION ON POWS, HOSTAGES AND MISSING PERSONS EXPRESSES ATTITUDE TO BIASED AND ONE-SIDED MEDIA REPORTS

    AzerTag, Azerbaijan
    June 19 2006

    Recently, there have been several biased and one-sided media reports
    commenting on the June 7-9, 2006 visit to Azerbaijan by Leo Platvoet,
    the rapporteur of the PACE Committee on Migration, Refugees and
    Population, according to the State Commission of the Azerbaijan
    Republic on POWs, Hostages and Missing Persons.

    The reports blame the rapporteur for his alleged double-standard
    approach to the problem of missing persons, refusal to meet with
    their families and accept related materials and so on.

    Given the mentioned above, the State Commission once again informs
    the public that PACE rapporteur Leo Platvoet met on June 8, 2006 with
    parents and relatives of the missing persons, heard them all out, and
    expressed his opinion on each case. During the 5-hour meeting over
    40 interested persons suggested to the rapporteur that Armenia and
    separatist regime of Nagorno-Karabakh withhold the information about
    fates of their children, and asked PACE to help in search for them.

    In response, Mr. Platvoet described the problem as very painful and
    said it was the reason why the decision to prepare a special report
    on the problem was made. He noted as well that the goal of the PACE
    mission should be gotten right. "Our major goal is to determine the
    scale of the problem, get acquainted with positions of the sides and
    bring them together to resolve this humanitarian problem," he said.

    The State Committee considers that the PACE rapporteur was acting in
    the framework of the mission he was charged with, and approached the
    problem just in this context. To demand from him some out-of-mission
    activities is simply far from being logical, and misunderstanding of
    this is a result of inexperience.

    At the meeting, Firudin Sadigov, Head of the working group at the
    State Commission on POWs, Hostages and Missing Persons provided its
    participants with detailed information about the accomplishment
    his group has gained so far and problems it comes across in its
    work. He stressed the necessity for the opposite side to take real and
    constructive steps to obtain positive results. Mr. Sadigov advised
    that since the beginning of the conflict, 1381 prisoners of war and
    hostages have been released, while the fates of 783 taken captive and
    hostage are still unknown as a result of inhumane approach by the
    opposite side. He added the documents related to the persons taken
    prisoners and hostages during intensive military operations were
    systemized and placed on the State Commission's official website in
    2000. Mr. Sadigov also expressed regret at the fact that activity of
    the related structure in Armenia was badly organized.

    He let the meeting participants know that the lists of 783 of 4604
    registered POWs and hostages and related documents, photo and video
    materials reflecting vandal actions - including destruction of
    historical and cultural monuments, and administrative buildings in
    Shusha, Agdam and Khojaly - committed by Armenians in the occupied
    lands of Azerbaijan, as well as those confirming illegal settling
    ethnic Armenians in these territories, had been handed over to the
    PACE mission for it to use them in the final report.

    These materials have also been stored on four CDs. Member of
    PACE officially accepted them to go through. Apart from that, the
    Commission states it had sent necessary materials to PACE even before
    the mission's visit to Azerbaijan.

    The information on the meeting held was spread by the State Commission
    of the Azerbaijan Republic on POWs, Hostages and Missing Persons
    through mass media, as well as placed on its official website.
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