Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan President Lashes Out At Armenia - On Twitter

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

  • Azerbaijan President Lashes Out At Armenia - On Twitter

    AZERBAIJAN PRESIDENT LASHES OUT AT ARMENIA - ON TWITTER
    Sergey Guneev

    RIA Novosti

    MOSCOW, November 20 (Dan Peleschuk, RIA Novosti) - Heads of state
    across the world have long since embraced Twitter as a means for
    communication with the masses.

    But few, it seems, have taken to it as voraciously as Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev, who used the social network on Tuesday
    to unleash a barrage of disparaging tweets against Armenia, the
    predominantly Islamic country's bitter rival.

    "Armenia as a country is of no value," Aliyev tweeted from his official
    handle, @presidentaz. "It is actually a colony, an outpost run from
    abroad, a territory artificially created on ancient Azerbaijani lands."

    He added that his country would "continue to expose Armenia's
    aggressive policy in all international organizations."

    The comments appeared at first to be aimed at domestic consumption.

    The tweets were excerpts taken from a November 16 speech he gave at
    a meeting of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party, which was celebrating
    its 20th anniversary, according to Aliyev's official website.

    While Aliyev also hailed in the speech what he said was Azerbaijan's
    positive development, his multitude of comments on Armenia were the
    first to be broadcast over Twitter.

    "I have often talked about it, I want to say it again without fearing
    anyone - our enemy is the Armenian lobby," Aliyev added.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have been bitter enemies since the Russian
    Civil War, in which inter-communal massacres by both sides took place
    in Baku and elsewhere.

    Their recent mutual enmity is rooted in a dispute over the breakaway
    majority ethnic-Armenian republic of Nagorno-Karabakh, which declared
    independence in 1992 but remains internationally recognized as part
    of Azerbaijan.

    The territory was the subject of a brutal war between the two countries
    in the early 1990s that left more than 30,000 dead and drove out most
    of the non-Armenian population. Both sides have regularly violated
    the shaky 1994 ceasefire, with low-intensity border incidents and
    sniper attacks now commonplace.

    More recently, a military build-up in both Armenia and Azerbaijan
    has led observers to fear another outbreak of large-scale violence
    may be imminent.

    "Azerbaijan grows stronger and more powerful by the year, while
    Armenia weakens and declines every year," Aliyev claimed on Tuesday.

    As international powers have unsuccessfully sought a solution to
    the frozen conflict - particularly in the form of the Minsk Group,
    organized by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) - officials from both Armenia and Azerbaijan have continued
    to trade barbs amid the heightened tension in recent months.

    Recently, the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities threatened to re-open
    an airport in the self-declared republic's capital of Stepanakert,
    attracting sharp criticism from Azerbaijani officials.

    Aliyev's latest tirade may reflect the worsening atmosphere.

    "We will continue our efforts to isolate Armenia," Aliyev said, his
    Twitter page adorned in a blue sunburst and emblazoned with the motto
    "We turn initiatives into reality!"

    "This policy is working," he added. "We see its results."

    Aliyev's counterpart, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, does not
    appear to have an official Twitter account.

Working...
X