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Hungary's repatriation of convicted Azerbaijani officer legitimate

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  • Hungary's repatriation of convicted Azerbaijani officer legitimate

    ITAR-TASS, Russia
    September 1, 2012 Saturday 02:38 AM GMT+4

    Hungary's repatriation of convicted Azerbaijani officer legitimate - Baku

    BAKU September 1


    Hungary's repatriation of Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov, jailed
    for life, was carried out on the basis of the European convention on
    the extradition of convicts, Azerbaijani presidential staff official
    told the local media on Friday.

    Fuad Aleskerov, the chief of law enforcement agencies relations
    department, recalled that Azerbaijan had joined the convention back in
    2000.

    "Under the clauses of that convention contacts were established with
    the Hungarian government agencies concerned and intensive negotiations
    held on Ramil Safarov's repatriation," Aleskerov said. He said that
    under the convention "any signatory is free to pardon or amnesty the
    extradited person or to ease punishment in accordance with its own
    constitution or other legal acts."

    Ramil Safarov has already served more than eight years of his term.
    Under item 22 of article 109 of the Azerbaijani constitution the
    question of his pardon is the exclusive prerogative of the head of
    state. The president displayed great humanism to use this power of
    his," Aleskerov said.

    He acknowledged that there had existed certain problems over Hungary's
    decision to repatriate Safarov, because "the process was politicized
    by the Armenian side from the outset." Besides, as follows from what
    Aleskerov said, Safarov's trial was accompanied by great procedural
    violations.

    "During the investigation he had to testify in Russian, although his
    knowledge of the language is poor. During the preliminary questioning
    he had no lawyer, and the bill of indictment was presented in
    Turkish," he said.

    While undergoing instruction at NATO's courses in Budapest in 2004,
    senior lieutenant Safarov killed Armenian army serviceman Gurgen
    Markarian, who, he claimed, had insulted the Azerbaijani flag. In
    April 2006 a court in Budapest sentenced Safarov to the life
    imprisonment. On Friday he was extradited to Baku, where he was
    pardoned and set free.

    Earlier, Armenia's president Serzh Sargsyan said that Yerevan had
    suspended diplomatic relations and all official contacts with Hungary
    in response to Budapest's decision to repatriate Safarov.

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