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  • Army Abuse in Azerbaijan

    Army Abuse Claims In Azerbaijan
    Questions asked about whether bullying in the Azerbaijani army prompted
    three soldiers to cross the front line.

    By Jasur Mamedov in Baku (CRS. No 382 08-Mar-07)
    IWPR

    The strange case of an army sergeant who allegedly gave himself up to
    Armenian forces has sparked a row about discipline and abuses inside
    Azerbaijan's army, with a rise in recorded cases of bullying and
    suicide.

    Twenty-year-old Samir Mamedov was taken prisoner by Armenian forces on
    December 24 last year on the border between Gazakh district in
    north-western Azerbaijan and Ijevan in Armenia.

    Armenian and Azerbaijani soldiers face each other on stretches of their
    common frontier, as well as along the long ceasefire line that surrounds
    the disputed territory of Nagorny Karabakh.

    In January, the head of the working group of Armenia's state commission
    for captives, hostages and missing-in-action, Armen Kaprielian announced
    that Mamedov did not wish to return to Azerbaijan.

    `Samir Mamedov deliberately crossed the state frontier and surrendered
    voluntarily,' Kaprielian told local media. `He was not taken prisoner,
    as Azerbaijani sources have claimed.'

    Armenian defence ministry spokesman Seiran Shakhsuvarian said that
    Mamedov had complained he was being beaten and humiliated by army
    officers. Armenian media reported that the soldier wanted to move to a
    third country, perhaps Norway.

    Azerbaijan's defence ministry has strongly rejected these allegations.

    Spokesman Ilgar Verdiev told IWPR that they were complete invention, `In
    all our experience, we have not encountered any case where Azerbaijani
    soldiers have voluntarily surrendered and ended up in Armenian
    captivity.'

    However, this is not the only case in the last three months in which
    Azerbaijani soldiers have ended up in Armenian captivity in disputed
    circumstances. On December 7, Vusal Garajayev was taken prisoner by
    Karabakh Armenian forces in the Aghdam region. The Karabakh Armenians
    later said that he had crossed the line of his own accord after being
    beaten up by fellow-soldiers.

    On December 31, another soldier, Eldeniz Nuriev, was taken prisoner on
    the Gazakh-Ijevan border.

    Both men later returned home after mediation by the International
    Committee of the Red Cross.

    At first, the Azerbaijani defence ministry said that Garajayev and
    Nuriev had both got lost in foggy conditions. But they have been
    arrested, and are facing charges of treason and abandoning their post.

    During the criminal investigation into the case, it emerged that
    Garajayev had been beaten up in his unit.

    Military expert Lieutenant-Colonel Uzeir Jafarov said it was illogical
    to accuse soldiers of treason if they had in fact been taken prisoner.

    `The commanders of the defence ministry are just being arrogant and they
    thought up these accusations to shirk their own responsibilities,' he
    told IWPR. `In the first place, what does the defence ministry think
    it's doing if soldiers are wandering freely around a mined battlefield
    and end up on the Armenian side?... Accusing captive soldiers of treason
    is an insult not just to the military but to the whole Azerbaijani
    nation.'

    At the same time, Jafarov said cases of abuse in the armed forces were
    common.

    `Why are commanders who subject their soldiers to violence not brought
    to account? There have been about 200 cases in the military in the last
    year alone, most of them relating to corruption or violence against
    soldiers,' he said.

    Jafarov said the arrest of the two men was probably a major reason why
    Mamedov did not want to return to Azerbaijan.

    According to data collected by Doktrina, a centre for journalistic
    investigations, in previous years 60-70 per cent of casualties in the
    army had direct military causes, such as shooting across the frontline
    and mine explosions, but in the last year 75 per cent of casualties were
    caused by non-battlefield incidents. The centre says this shows a rise
    in the number of suicides and cases of bullying.

    The centre noted that 30 Azerbaijani officers, including several
    colonels, have been arrested on corruption charges in the last three
    months.

    In another high-profile case, two high-ranking Azerbaijani officers have
    gone on hunger strike after whistle-blowing. Lieutenant-Colonel Azer
    Gasymov began his protest after he complained about wrongdoing in the
    defence ministry, and was was transferred from his unit in Baku to
    distant Nakhichevan, demoted and had his pay cut in half.

    Another lieutenant-colonel, Rasim Muradov, who had been deputy commander
    of Azerbaijan's peacekeeping forces, began his hunger strike after he
    too was transferred to Nakhichevan when he complained about corruption
    among Azerbaijani peacekeepers in Iraq, Kosovo and Afghanistan.

    The spate of allegations about abuses in the army prompted Azerbaijan's
    human rights ombudsman Elmira Suleimanova to file a letter of enquiry to
    the defence ministry.

    `We appealed to the defence minister in connection with the imprisonment
    and persecution of soldiers,' Suleimanova told IWPR. `In the letter, we
    expressed our wish to look into the incidents that have occurred and pay
    increased attention to discipline in military units.'

    Experts say that the heightened attention to issues of abuse and
    corruption in the Azerbaijani army is linked to Azerbaijan's efforts to
    implement its Individual Partnership Action Plan or IPAP with NATO in
    2007. As a result, the military prosecutor's office and the national
    security minister are now investigating the army more closely.

    Samir Mamedov's family hopes that he will return home soon. They are in
    regular contact with the Red Cross, which has met him 12 times and
    delivered three letters from him to his loved ones.

    In a letter home, Mamedov wrote, `Forget about me and don't worry. It
    seems this is just how my fate has turned out.'

    But his family insist this letter must have been written under pressure.
    The captive soldier's uncle Vidali Mamedov said, `My nephew loves his
    homeland very much. It's quite possible that they put psychological
    pressure on Samir.'

    Azerbaijan's state committee for prisoners and missing-in-action told
    IWPR that it would be possible to find out whether Mamedov had been put
    under undue pressure only when he returned home. The Red Cross said it
    could not comment on the matter as it was acting as an impartial
    mediator.

    Jasur Mamedov is a military commentator with Aina-Zerkalo newspaper in
    Baku


    http://www.iwpr.net/?p=&s=f&o=33 3905&apc_state=henh
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