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Maragha The Bloodiest Episode Of The War In Karabakh

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  • Maragha The Bloodiest Episode Of The War In Karabakh

    MARAGHA THE BLOODIEST EPISODE OF THE WAR IN KARABAKH

    KarabakhOpen
    10-04-2007 10:31:38

    On April 9 the presentation of the disk "Maragha" produced by the
    Milky Way Studio took place at Artsakh State University.

    April 10 is the 15th anniversary of the tragedy in the village of
    Maragha, Martakert. In the night of April 10, 1992 the Azerbaijani
    special operational force and the Fourth Soviet Army stationed in
    Kirovabad attacked the village, which had a population of 5 thousand
    by that time. The 200 militants of the village could not stop the
    tanks and the armored machines, and the Azerbaijanis captured the
    village. In four hours Maragha was liberated by the joint defense
    squads. However, the Armenian militants still remember the horrible
    picture they saw. Dead bodies torn to parts, people burnt alive,
    old people and children taken hostages... People were not just killed.

    "It was perhaps the bloodiest episode of the war in Karabakh. What
    happened in Maragha was the consequence of the policy conducted by
    Azerbaijan for years on. The seeds of hatred grew at the convenient
    moment - Sumgait, Maragha...

    Unfortunately, the policy of inciting hatred continues, which does
    not allow setting up friendly relations between our countries,"
    said Speaker Ashot Ghulyan during the presentation.

    "The massacres of the peaceful population in Maragha had nothing to do
    with the military actions. These people did not threaten Azerbaijan,
    the village was not a weapon emplacement. However, the criminals have
    not assumed responsibility yet," said Vahram Atanesyan, the chair of
    the Committee of External Relations.

    Narine Aghabalyan, director of the Milky Way Studio, said the disc
    contains documents, stories of witnesses, the participants and the
    victims, photos, footages of the next day of the tragedy, as well as a
    film based on the stories of witnesses. After the liberation Baroness
    Caroline Cox arrived at the village. An interview with her and passages
    from her book about ethnic cleansing were included in the disk as well.

    Narine Aghabalyan told that the only effort to make the events
    in Maragha known to the world was made by the Organization Against
    Legal Arbitrariness (director Larissa Alaverdyan). A lot of materials
    were accumulated, which were to be presented to the UN but the work
    stopped halfway.

    All the materials that the organization had collected were included in
    the disk. Narine Aghabalyan said the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    provided archive materials and legal documents. The disk also includes
    newspaper stories.

    The production was sponsored by the American businessman Vardges
    Anivyan, the owner of the milk factory of Stepanakert.

    "According to these materials, on that day 81 people were slaughtered,
    67 were taken hostages. Some hostages were later returned or exchanged,
    but many are still missing. 260 families, 880 people, remained in
    Karabakh after those events. Now the village of Maragha is in the
    neutral territory. In satellite photos we can see that the village
    has been razed to the ground," Narine Aghabalyan says.

    "In New Maragha 530 people live. We started living in this village
    because there is nowhere else we can go to. And we have the right to
    live there until we return to our native village," said the head of
    the community of Nor Maragha Roma Karapetyan.

    Most inhabitants of Maragha live in Russia. "We still have contact
    with them, but they are reluctant to return," said the head of the
    community.

    "Azerbaijan was able to persuade the UN to send a mission to Karabakh
    to " prove" that Armenians live in the liberated territories. Where
    are the people of Maragha supposed to live? Where are those 7000
    people who lived in Maragha, Margushavan? Isn't the UN supposed to
    think about them?" Narine Aghabalyan said.
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