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Armenians inform New York Times editors of situation in NK

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  • Armenians inform New York Times editors of situation in NK

    Armenians informs The New York Times editors of situation in Nagorny Karabakh

    arminfo
    Friday, June 3, 17:01

    A message is spread by Facebook social network, which informs about an
    anti- Armenian article published in New York Times on May 31. The
    article is named "Frozen Conflict Between Azerbaijan and Armenia
    Begins to Boil" and aims to present Azerbaijanis as victims, confirms
    Azerbaijani moral right to restart war against NK and "restore
    Azerbaijani territorial completeness".

    The initiators offer Facebook users to send many messages to NY Times
    editorial and tell them truth about NK issue and Azerbaijan.

    The message says that Ellen Barry's recent article caused great
    frustration to readers. Mrs. Barry's biased approach in the article
    makes one think that the article was written under the influence of
    the Azerbaijani propaganda.

    "This article is mostly dedicated to the description of undesirable
    consequences for Azerbaijan that were caused as a result of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. But the author is silent about the fact
    that it was Azerbaijan first to launch an aggressive war against
    Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as to organize the bombing of some border
    areas of Armenia itself. Moreover, both international and Soviet law
    did allow Nagorno- Karabakh to achieve its independence. The
    fundamental human rights of Karabakh Armenian population had been
    violated for decades, and the culmination of violations was the ethnic
    cleansings of late 1980s.

    There are also detailed sad stories of Azerbaijani refugees, but the
    author is tacit about Azerbaijan's brutal policy towards its own
    population. Azerbaijan, unlike Armenia, views its refugees only as a
    tool of its policy. For many years refugees in Azerbaijan were not
    allowed to leave their tent camps as if they were kept in
    concentration camps.

    Mrs. Barry repeats the official position of Azerbaijan and insists
    that the current framework of the OSCE Minsk Group negotiations have
    exhausted itself. But she is silent about the fact that the main
    barrier of progress in the negotiations is Azerbaijan's destructive
    approach of failing the negotiation (incidentally she talks as if the
    international community is negotiating with Armenia (yet, the
    negotiations are between Armenia and Azerbaijan, with the
    participation of Nagorno-Karabakh, and mediated by the OSCE Minsk
    Group Co-Chairs)). The point is that Azerbaijan has been poisoning its
    own population with Armenophobia and revanchism for about two decades,
    and now the government doesn't know what to answer to the people of
    Azerbaijan, when the OSCE Minsk Group mediators insist that the status
    of Karabakh should be decided through a legally binding free
    expression of will of its people. Moreover, calls for a new aggression
    are repeatedly cited in the article, and the author treats those calls
    quite normally.

    However, the OSCE Minsk Group mediators in their statements clearly
    point out that the resumption of war is unacceptable for the
    international community, that the settlement of the conflict should be
    based on a comprehensive application of the three basic principles:
    the prohibition of threat or use of force, self- determination and
    territorial integrity. Mediators also stress that all conflicting
    parties should prepare their people for peace and not for war. In
    fact, the citations of aggression used by the author in fact endorse
    the fact that the international mediators' calls for peace are
    directed at Azerbaijan. Any use of force is clearly prohibited in
    international law, and this time the international community is
    determined to prevent the repetition of such actions by Azerbaijan.

    But from the New York Times' article from May 31 one gets the
    impression that it is natural that Azerbaijan is preparing for war, as
    if it is a party that has been treated unjustly.

    Mr. Keller, I sincerely hope that your editorial would be more careful
    in printing such biased articles in the future. Azerbaijan spends
    millions of dollars for its PR campaign abroad. And I hope the New
    York Times' esteemed reputation can not be marred by the
    petrol-dollars from the Caspian Sea," " the author of the message
    writes.

    The New York Times is the third popular publications in the USA (after
    The Wall Street Journal & USA Today).

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