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What about POWs? Officials in Baku and Yerevan want to know answer

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  • What about POWs? Officials in Baku and Yerevan want to know answer

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    August 10, 2007 Friday

    WHAT ABOUT POWS?;
    The question officials in Baku and Yerevan want to know an answer to

    R. Orujev


    BAKU AND YEREVAN: NEITHER KNOWS WHAT TO DO WITH PRISONERS OF WAR;
    Countries involved in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh do not know
    what to do with POWs.



    The general public remains largely up in the air on the question if
    the Azerbaijani and Armenian military and civilians end up as POWs of
    their own volition or under compulsion. It is only known at this
    point that several citizens of Azerbaijan are POWs in Armenia and on
    the occupied Azerbaijani territories and that several Armenians are
    POWs this side of the front.

    The identities of all these people are known. On the other hand, the
    validity of what media outlets report concerning the circumstances of
    their capture and whether or not they had any personal motives to
    cross the front line remains questionable. Whether or not the
    exchange of POWs may be arranged is another question without a clear
    answer.

    Here is what is known, which is not much.

    Corporal Samir Mamedov was taken prisoner in late December 2006. He
    is kept in Yerevan.

    Ashraf Jafarov, a mental hospital patient, was seized on June 30.
    Occupiers have him in Hankendi now.

    Anar Aliyev (born in 1978), was taken prisoner on the line of contact
    on August 2. Young man with college education, Aliyev had served his
    country in uniformed capacity.

    A soldier of the Armenian regular army defected to Azerbaijan on
    August 4. Ambartsum Mnjakovich Asutarjan was born in the Armavik
    district of Armenia in 1984. He was drafted on May 17. Asutarjan
    explained his decision to defect to the tyranny and lawlessness in
    the Armenian Armed Forces where he said soldiers were regularly
    assaulted and even tortured by officers. According to Lieutenant
    Colonel Senor Asratjan, Press Secretary of the so-called Defense
    Ministry of the so-called Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, maintains in the
    meantime that Asutarjan, 23, went AWOL on August 4 and ended up on
    the Azerbaijani territory. The so- called Defense Ministry calls
    Asutarjan a draft-dodger enlisted only in May 2007. Unit commanders
    call Asutarjan "a difficult serviceman" and a born draft-dodger.

    One Valery Suleimanjan (civilian), resident of the occupied Mardakert
    district of Nagorno-Karabakh, was taken prisoner this spring. He is
    in custody in the detention cell of the National Security Ministry of
    the Republic of Azerbaijan and displays no inclination to go back.

    Eldar Safarov, the head of the Press Secretary of the Azerbaijani
    Defense Ministry, said yesterday that "we are clarifying all points"
    concerning the possibility of exchange and promised to be more exact
    quite soon.

    "The warring sides may do all they want, they may even exchange POWs
    without the consent of these latter," human rights activist Murad
    Sadaddinov said. "International practice in the meantime does not
    permit the return of the people by force when the people in question
    surrendered in the first place of their own volition. The situation
    being what it is, however, I won't be surprised to hear of exceptions
    to the rule."

    Source: Ekho (Baku), August 7, 2007, EV

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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