Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nato Chief Criticizes Baku For Axe-Killer's Pardon

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

  • Nato Chief Criticizes Baku For Axe-Killer's Pardon

    NATO CHIEF CRITICIZES BAKU FOR AXE-KILLER'S PARDON

    asbarez
    Thursday, September 6th, 2012

    President Sarkisian with NATO Secretary General Rassmusen in Yerevan
    Thursday

    Shirks NATO responsibility for Safarov's extradition and subsequent
    pardon.

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Visiting Armenia on Thursday, NATO Secretary
    General Anders Fogh Rasmussen added his voice to Western criticism
    of Azerbaijan's decision to pardon the Azerbaijani army officer who
    had axed to death an Armenian colleague during a NATO training course
    in Budapest.

    Rasmussen at the same time pointedly declined to criticize NATO
    member Hungary for making that possible by extraditing Ramil Safarov
    to Azerbaijan more than eight years after the brutal killing. He said
    the extradition followed "international norms and standards."

    Rasmussen was in Yerevan on the first leg of his tour of the three
    South Caucasus states that was overshadowed by the fallout from
    Safarov's controversial release from a Hungarian prison. He faced
    hundreds of Armenians demonstrating in the capital to demand its
    strong condemnation by NATO.

    "I am deeply concerned by the Azerbaijani decision to pardon
    army officer Safarov," Rasmussen told RFE/RL's Armenian service
    (Azatutyun.am) in an interview. "This very tragic and terrible incident
    happened eight years ago and it was a crime. Such a crime should not
    be glorified, and the decision taken by Azerbaijan damages trust and
    does not contribute to peace and reconciliation."

    "Having said that, it is also important that we do not return to
    conflict," he said. "On the contrary, it is crucial to work for a
    reduction of tensions and promote peace and reconciliation."

    "I will raise [the issue] during my visit to Baku and I will convey
    this very clear message to the Azerbaijani authorities," added the
    former Danish prime minister.

    Rasmussen made a similar statement after his ensuing talks with
    President Serzh Sarkisian that touched upon the Safarov affair and
    its implications. Sarkisian reiterated Yerevan's furious reaction
    to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's decisions to pardon the
    convicted axe-murderer and reward him with a higher military rank
    and hefty material benefits immediately after his repatriation.

    "Azerbaijan has turned itself into a sponsor of the crime with its
    own hands," Sarkisian told a joint news conference with the NATO chief.

    "This is an unacceptable, inadmissible and condemnable phenomenon
    that deals a big blow to the aims of the [NATO] Partnership for Peace
    program and seriously jeopardizes regional security in the South
    Caucasus. In this situation, nobody has the moral right to stay silent
    and ignore what happened."

    Rasmussen was greeted by angry demonstrators

    Sarkisian also again hit out at Hungary, with which his government
    has suspended diplomatic relations. He said the Hungarian government
    must have known in advance that Safarov, who was sentenced to life
    imprisonment by a Hungarian court in 2006, will be set free on his
    return home.

    Official Budapest insists that the extradition was based on a European
    convention to which both Azerbaijan and Hungary are signatories. It
    says it had received formal assurances from Baku that Safarov will
    serve the rest of his jail term in an Azerbaijani prison.

    Rasmussen clearly backed the official Hungarian position when he
    addressed students and professors at Yerevan State University (YSU)
    earlier in the day. "I understand that the transfer of Mr. Safarov
    from Hungary to Azerbaijan has taken place based on an agreement
    that follows international norms and standards," he said, answering
    a question from one of the students.

    Rasmussen also stressed that neither NATO nor Hungary should be held
    responsible for the killing of Armenian Lieutenant Gurgen Markarian
    during an English-language course that was organized by NATO in
    Budapest in 2004 for military officers from partner states.

    "It was a crime committed by an individual, an Azerbaijani army
    officer," he said. He was brought to court in Hungary, he was sentenced
    to many years in prison, and he was treated in Hungary according to
    the basic principles of the rule of law."

    As Rasmussen spoke hundreds of mostly young people demonstrated outside
    the sprawling YSU building in central Yerevan to express their anger
    about Safarov's release and demand its unequivocal condemnation
    by NATO.

    President Sarkisian, meanwhile, made clear that the bitter row with
    Hungary "must not cast a shadow on our relations with NATO." "Armenia
    is ready and determined to maintain and develop the current level of
    cooperation," he said after the talks.

Working...
X