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Eighteen years ago the Armenian massacres started in Baku

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  • Eighteen years ago the Armenian massacres started in Baku

    Eighteen years ago the Armenian massacres started in Baku
    14.01.2008 12:08

    Tatul Hakobyan
    "Radiolur"

    Eighteen years ago on these days the Armenian districts of Baku became
    a stage for the Armenian massacres. Different from other regions of
    Azerbaijan, many Armenians still resided in Baku. Certainly, they could
    have moved and saved their lives two year before, but they continued to
    believe in the internationalism of Baku till the very end. Like
    Sumgayit, the attacks were particularly cruel.

    According to one of the former leaders of the Popular Front Zardusht
    Alizade, a few days before the massacres of Baku posters on the walls
    of the party building on Rashid Beibutov Street pointed to the houses
    Armenians lived in: `the whole city had gathered at the meeting of the
    Popular Front. Anti-Armenian calls could be heard during the whole
    meeting. The last slogan called `Long live Baku without Armenians." The
    Armenian massacres started during the demonstration,' Alizade declared.

    According to historian Arif Yunusov, 86 thousand Armenians were killed
    between January 13 and 15. According to the data of the Armenian side,
    the number exceeded 150 thousand. Thousands of Armenians found shelter
    in `Shafag' cinema. They were later moved to Baku port, from where they
    could reach Krasnovodsk port of Turkmenistan and later to Yerevan.

    The Soviet troops were brought to Baku only when the Armenian massacres
    were over. On January 11 the Popular Front took some administrative
    buildings in Baku by storm and seized the power in Lenkoran city.
    Azerbaijan's leader Abdurahman Vezirov declared on TV that it's time
    for decisive actions. Second Secretary of the Communist Party of
    Azerbaijan Viktor Polyanichko negotiated with the leaders of the
    Popular Front, as a result of which the National Defense Council was
    formed. Four of the five members of the Council, Etibar Mamedov, Neymet
    Panahov, Rahim Gaziyev and Abulfaz Elchibey, were from the radical
    nationalist wing of the Popular Front. Panahov declared on Azeri
    television that Baku was full of homeless refugees, while thousands of
    Armenians still comfortably lived in their homes in Baku.

    Two years ago, in response to the assertions of the reporter of the
    `Moskovskiy Komsomolets' saying troops were brought to Tbilisi,
    Vilnius, and Baku, the first and last President of the Soviet Union
    Mikhail Gorbachev declared that upon his order troops entered only the
    capital of Azerbaijan.
    `The events in Baku got out of control, the Supreme Council and the
    Communist Party were paralyzed, the 200 km-long state border was
    destroyed, local self-government bodies were being attacked. I
    immediately sent Evgeny Primakov and Andrey Girenko to Baku. They
    suggested to declare state of emergency and bring troops. Now I think
    that we thus prevented a greater bloodshed.'

    The presidency of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of The
    Soviet Union and the Council of Ministers applied to the people of
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, calling on `men and women, the elderly and the
    young to listen to the voice of reason, restrain the extremists,
    denounce the provokers, stop the aggressors,' `to support the efforts
    of the leadership of the country, the law-enforcement bodies, the
    Ministry of Interior Affairs, the Soviet troops and frontier guards
    directed at restoring peace and order.'

    Sure, this was a cynical call, since only a few days before that the
    Soviet leadership, the law-enforcement bodies, the Ministry of Interior
    Affairs and the troops of the Soviet Army did not even try to prevent
    the Armenian massacres.

    As leader of Nakhijevan in early 1990s, late Heidar Aliyev was telling
    American reporter Thomas Golts who were guilty for the `black January.'
    `It was the State Security Committee of Moscow and that of Azerbaijan,
    as well as the whole leadership of Azerbaijan. They all were involved
    in the attacks against Armenians on January 12, 13 and 14.'
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