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Azerbaijan Expels Russian Journalist

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  • Azerbaijan Expels Russian Journalist

    AZERBAIJAN EXPELS RUSSIAN JOURNALIST

    ARMENPRESS
    Aug 13 2007

    BAKU, AUGUST 13, ARMENPRESS: Azerbaijani authorities have expelled a
    Russian journalist working for Russian Rosbalt news agency. Russian
    Interfax news agency quoted Azeri officials as saying that Yana
    Amelina's expulsion, however, was not 'official."

    Interfax said its sources refused to divulge, saying only that Yana
    Amelina had spent 6 days in Azerbaijan, was arrested in the southern
    Lenkoran and was flown to Baku.

    "Before arriving in Azerbaijan the Russian journalist was in Armenia
    and visisted the occupied and Armenian-controlled Azerbaijani regions,"
    Interfax's source said.

    In Lenkoran the Russian journalist was supposed to study the problems
    of the local Talysh people, who make the majority of population
    in Azerbaijan's southeastern parts. This, according to Interfax,
    prompted officials in Baku to conclude that the Russian journalist
    has an 'anti-Azerbaijani" stance.

    Talysh people represent the indigenous Iranian population of
    Azerbaijan that distinguishes itself from the majority of inhabitants
    of Azerbaijan who say they are of Turkic origin. The Talysh are
    concentrated in the southeast of Azerbaijan near the border with Iran.

    Because of the discriminative policy of Baku the majority of them
    either have lost national consciousness, or are afraid to recognize
    themselves openly as Talysh.

    In the summer of 1993, amid a political destabilization, leaders of
    Talysh national movement declared the establishment of the Talysh
    Republic, but it existed for only two months and was suppressed by
    Azeri power and security structures.

    Ex-president of Talysh Republic Alikram Gummatov is still in
    prison. Majority of the other national leaders, who managed to
    flee, settled down in Russia, because the Talysh movement was
    Russian-oriented from the beginning of the last century. However,
    receiving no support from Moscow in 1993, a number of activists of
    Talysh movement have changed their orientation towards Iran.
    From: Baghdasarian
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