Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan Authorities Interrogate Music Fans In Eurovision Probe

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

  • Azerbaijan Authorities Interrogate Music Fans In Eurovision Probe

    AZERBAIJAN AUTHORITIES INTERROGATE MUSIC FANS IN EUROVISION PROBE
    Sean Michaels

    guardian.co.uk
    Tuesday 18 August 2009 09.50 BST

    Forty-three Azerbaijani music fans who voted for neighbouring Armenia
    in this year's Eurovision song contest have been questioned about their
    'ethnic pride'

    AySel and Arash perform the Azerbaijan entry for the Eurovision song
    contest 2009. Photograph: Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters

    Authorities in Azerbaijan have reportedly brought in dozens of music
    fans for interrogation, questioning their patriotism after they voted
    for Armenia in this year's Eurovision song contest.

    Azerbaijan's national security ministry has allegedly spoken to each
    of the 43 Azerbaijani who voted for Armenian duo Inga and Anush,
    singing Jan Jan, rather than AySel and Arash's Azerbaijani entry,
    Always. Though officials told the BBC that they had "merely invited
    [voters] to explain" their votes, one fan described a more robust
    interrogation.

    "They said it was a matter of national security," Rovshan Nasirli told
    Radio Free Europe. "They were trying to put psychological pressure
    on me, saying things like, 'You have no sense of ethnic pride. How
    come you voted for Armenia?'"

    The 22-year-old said that he voted for the Armenian entry because it
    sounded even "more Azeri" that Azerbaijan's own submission. Always,
    which came third, was a duet between Azeribaijan's AySel and
    Iranian/Swedish singer Arash. "I voted for Armenia to protest the
    fact that Arash was representing Azerbaijan," Nasirli said.

    Relations are tense between Azerbaijan and Armenia due to the ongoing
    dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, where the countries fought a war in
    the early 90s. The mountainous region, mostly occupied by ethnic
    Armenians, is formally under Azerbaijani jurisdiction. Though the
    two countries seemed to be approaching consensus in negotiations
    earlier this year, this recent Eurovision controversy has helped fan
    the flames of resentment.
Working...
X