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Azeri President Aliyev Reminds Armenia Pardoning Of Its Bomber In 20

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  • Azeri President Aliyev Reminds Armenia Pardoning Of Its Bomber In 20

    AZERI PRESIDENT ALIYEV REMINDS ARMENIA PARDONING OF ITS BOMBER IN 2001

    Interfax
    Sept 10 2012
    Russia

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev defended his decision to pardon Azeri
    officer Ramil Safarov earlier sentenced to life in Hungary for killing
    an Armenian officer by recalling Armenia's 2001 decision to pardon
    Varoujan Garabedian, who had been sentenced to life in France for
    bombing a Turkish Airlines check-in desk at Orly airport in Paris
    in 1983.

    "I want to remind Armenians that the person who committed a terrorist
    attack at Orly airport, which killed citizens of European countries
    and the U.S., was extradited to Armenia in 2001. While he was not
    a citizen of Armenia, the president of this country pardoned him,"
    Aliyev said at a press conference with NATO Secretary General Anders
    Fogh Rasmussen in Baku on Friday.

    "I wouldn't like to draw parallels between our officer and terrorists.

    But Ramil Safarov served about 9 years in prison, and his release is
    absolutely correct from the legal viewpoint. This is a presidential
    decision, and it is correct. Azerbaijan has returned his officer to
    his home country," Aliyev said.

    It was reported earlier that Aliyev had said at a meeting with
    Rasmussen that Safarov's extradition from Hungary to Azerbaijan and
    his further pardoning were absolutely legitimate.

    Garabedian, a former member of the Armenian Secret Army for the
    Liberation of Armenia (ASALA), who was extradited to Armenia from
    France in 2001, was pardoned and received by then Prime Minister
    Andranik Markarian, who welcomed his release from a French prison.

    Ramil Safarov, a senior lieutenant in the Azeri army, murdered Armenian
    army lieutenant Gurgen Margarian in 2004 in Budapest, where both were
    attending an English language course as part of NATO's Partnership
    for Peace program.

    In 2006, a Budapest court gave Safarov a life sentence without the
    right to seek pardon during the first 30 years of the term.

    However, Hungary extradited Safarov to Azerbaijan on August 31, 2012,
    assuming that he would serve the rest of his term in his own country,
    but Azeri President Ilham Aliyev pardoned him the same day.

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