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Budapest court upholds life sentence for Azerbaijani officer

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  • Budapest court upholds life sentence for Azerbaijani officer

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 22, 2007 Thursday 2:15 PM GMT

    Budapest court upholds life sentence for Azerbaijani officer


    A Budapest court upheld a life sentence on Thursday against an
    Azerbaijani military officer convicted of murdering an Armenian
    lieutenant in Hungary in 2004, court spokesman Gyorgy Felkai told
    AFP.

    The murder had inflamed simmering ethnic tensions between Azerbaijan
    and Armenia, two former Soviet republics fighting for control over
    the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The appellate court upheld the life sentence handed down by the
    first instance," Felkai said Thursday.

    Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani army lieutenant, used an axe to hack
    Armenian lieutenant Gurgen Markarian to death in his sleep in the
    dormitories of a NATO training centre in Budapest in 2004.

    The two officers were enrolled in an English-language course in the
    Hungarian capital as part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's
    Partnership for Peace programme, of which both Armenia and Azerbaijan
    are members.

    Safarov was also found guilty of planning the murder of another
    Armenian, which he did not carry out.

    He will be eligible for parole in 30 years.

    Armenia had attributed the murder to "anti-Armenian hysteria" fanned
    by the Baku government, while Azerbaijani officials countered that
    the killer was himself a refugee from the conflict with Armenia and
    that the victim had taunted him over the conflict.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a six-year war over Karabakh that
    claimed around 25,000 lives and displaced hundreds of thousands of
    people.

    It ended in a tense ceasefire in 1994 with Armenian forces in control
    of most of the enclave and seven surrounding regions, but Karabakh's
    status remains unresolved and tensions are still at boiling point.
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