Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Assembly Calls Congress' Attention To Destruction Of Julfa

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Assembly Calls Congress' Attention To Destruction Of Julfa

    ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY CALLS CONGRESS' ATTENTION TO DESTRUCTION OF JULFA CEMETERY

    Lragir, Armenia
    July 16 2007

    Washington, DC - The Armenian Assembly expressed serious concerns
    over Azerbaijan's attempts to restrict basic rights and freedoms
    for minorities and called on Congress to urge Baku to thoroughly
    investigate the deliberate destruction of Armenian headstones in the
    medieval cemetery of Julfa in 2005.

    In testimony submitted for a House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee
    hearing, entitled "Ideals vs. Reality in Human Rights and U.S. Foreign
    Policy: The Cases of Azerbaijan, Cuba, and Egypt" on July 12 the
    Assembly denounced Azerbaijan's lack of effort to develop a civil
    society based on the rule of law.

    "This regime has fostered an atmosphere of intolerance for free
    speech and free press by regularly resorting to violence and arbitrary
    judicial practices," the Assembly stated in its testimony. "It also
    restricts the most basic rights and freedoms of its citizens, including
    those of ethnic and religious minorities, in particular members of
    the Armenian minority, who are routinely harassed and intimidated."

    The Assembly also expressed grave concern over Azerbaijan's failure
    to condemn an Azeri military officer who brutally murdered an Armenian
    participant at a NATO Partnership for Peace military training exercise
    in Hungary in 2003. Rather than ensure that justice is served,
    Azerbaijan's National Democratic Party has awarded the individual
    the title of "Man of the Year."

    With respect to the destruction of the Julfa Cemetery, the Assembly
    noted that the Azeri military was captured on film destroying the
    centuries-old Armenian headstones of the Julfa Cemetery in Nakhichevan,
    Azerbaijan. The Assembly likened the action to the 2001 destruction
    of the statues of the Buddha by the Taliban in Afghanistan and noted
    that Baku has rejected fact-finding missions to Julfa, and has refused
    to investigate the matter itself.

    Additionally, the Assembly called attention to the troubling reports
    by the Azeri media that the Armenian cathedral of St. Gregory the
    Illuminator in Baku may be demolished, converted to a mosque, or
    used for some other purpose. The Assembly urged Congress to undertake
    measures to preserve the church and ensure the protection of ethnic
    and minority rights.

    Turning to Azerbaijan's military expenditures, the Assembly highlighted
    that the country is one of the world's most rapidly militarizing
    regimes, having increased its spending from $141 million to $900
    million in the past three years.

    "We remain concerned that the rapid military escalation by Azerbaijan
    not only poses a threat to democratic development and human rights,
    but also to regional stability and security," the Assembly explained.

    "We therefore, urge this Subcommittee and Congress to implement policy
    measures that will bring about a de-escalation of tensions in the
    region, as well as foster greater respect for human rights."

    Jennifer L. Windsor, executive director of Freedom House, testified
    at yesterday's hearing and stated that: "The [Azeri] regime has been
    able to effectively utilize its enormous petrol wealth to further
    consolidate its control over society."

    In her prepared testimony Windsor described Azerbaijan as "a
    hydrocarbon-dependent quasi-dynasty," and noted that "Azerbaijan's
    sorry record on democracy and human rights...are well documented in
    the State Department's annual human rights reports."

    The hearing, which was presided over by Subcommittee Chair Rep. Bill
    Delahunt (D-MA), also included testimony from Morton H. Halperin,
    Ph.D, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, and Frank
    Calzon executive director for The Center for a Free Cuba.

    The Assembly's testimony marked the fifth of this year before
    Congress. The Assembly testimonies have focused on a broad range of
    issues, including Genocide and the Rule of Law, U.S. Policy in the
    South Caucasus and appropriations funding, the Darfur Accountability
    Act, the State Department Human Rights Report, as well as human rights
    in Azerbaijan.
Working...
X