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  • Day of lying Azerbaijani propaganda

    Day of lying Azerbaijani propaganda

    NEWS.AM
    January 20, 2013 | 10:08

    By Ivan Gharibyan


    January 20 is a day of `national mourning' in Azerbaijan. This is the
    Aliyev clan's interpretation of the tragic events in Baku in January
    1990. The Azeri state propaganda has taken one episode out of the
    entire context of the tragic events - the entry of Soviet troops to
    Baku, which was the only way of establishing law and order in the
    city, with numerous acts of brutal violence and ethnic murders being
    committed there.

    For nearly 25 years the tragic events in Azerbaijan have been
    designated as `suppression of the Azerbaijani people's aspiration for
    freedom.' So what does, according to the Aliyev clan, the `Azerbaijani
    people's aspiration for freedom and independence' mean? Nothing but
    mass pogroms of the local Armenian population in several cities,
    including the capital, gang rapes, including statutory rapes, burning
    people alive.

    And now the rising generation in Azerbaijan is sure that, all of a
    sudden, the Soviet leaders decided to introduce troops into peaceful
    Baku, and those troops proved to be `extremely cruel.' And no one even
    asks: Why did the Kremlin order the troops to enter the capital of one
    of the Soviet republics? No. But we can only hear `moving' speeches
    about the `totalitarian Communist regime, which committed a terrorist
    act against the Azerbaijani people.' By the way, everything turns out
    tragically absurd at this point as well: the `national leader' Heydar
    Aliyev, who saved the Azerbaijani people from all the troubles, was an
    outstanding representative of the `totalitarian Communist regime.'

    Xenophobia, the very essence of present-day Azerbaijan, has been
    especially obvious over the last few days. The official propaganda
    inadvertently betrays one of the pillars of the present-day ideology
    of `prospering' Azerbaijan - no room for other ethnic groups,
    especially ones practicing other religions, in the country. This is
    the conclusion one can draw from the numerous interpretations of the
    events in January 1990 offered by Azerbaijan. Of course, according to
    official Baku propaganda, beatings, rapes and murders on January 13-19
    were not a tragedy. Moreover, nothing like that had ever happened. But
    the entry of Soviet troops to Baku on January 20 was `a national
    disaster.'

    The fundamental principles of the Aliyev clan's propaganda are nothing
    but a manifestation of neofascism: Armenian citizens of the
    Azerbaijani Soviet Republic could be murdered in cold blood without
    any problems, and those murders were manifestations of `the
    Azerbaijani people's aspiration for freedom and independence.' But
    killing the participants in the Armenian pogroms as Soviet troops
    entered Baku was a `tragedy' - they were Azeris!

    Yes, January 20 is a tragic date for the Azerbaijanis. It is a real
    tragedy when thugs and murderers are officially declared national
    heroes, when `a Shahids' lane' is built in their honor for people,
    like a herd of cattle, to go up there to pay homage to the
    cut-throats' memory.


    From: Baghdasarian
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