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Tale Of Armenian "Saboteur" Highlights Confusion Around Karabakh Fig

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  • Tale Of Armenian "Saboteur" Highlights Confusion Around Karabakh Fig

    TALE OF ARMENIAN "SABOTEUR" HIGHLIGHTS CONFUSION AROUND KARABAKH FIGHTING

    EurasiaNet.org
    Feb 4 2014

    February 4, 2014 - 11:12am, by Joshua Kucera

    Two weeks after tensions spiked on the line of contact between Armenian
    and Azerbaijani forces, much information about what is actually
    happening there remains unclear. A spokesman for Azerbaijan's defense
    ministry said on February 3 that "dozens" of Armenian soldiers had been
    killed, while the Armenian authorities in the de facto Nagorno Karabakh
    government denied that. And many of the first-reported claims about
    the upsurge in fighting -- an Armenian vehicle destroyed, attempted
    incursions by both sides -- remain murky.

    One initial report has proven especially embarrassing for the
    Azerbaijani side. Citing the defense ministry, Azerbaijani media
    reported that on January 28, an Armenian "saboteur" was captured
    by Azerbaijani soldiers: "Armed and injured leader of an enemy
    intelligence-sabotage group Mamiko Khojayan was captured by our
    soldiers after a brief firefight."

    But when Azerbaijani television stations aired footage of Khojayan, the
    image was not of an elite special ops commando, but of a disheveled,
    disoriented old man. And soon after, neighbors and relatives of the
    man in Armenia identified him as a 77-year-old mentally ill man.

    "Azerbaijanis present this poor Armenian as a saboteur, but that
    doesn't mean it's the truth," Baku-based political analyst Zardusht
    Alizade told the BBC Azerbaijani service. Azerbaijani opposition
    media and, naturally, Armenian media have picked up the tragicomic
    story with gusto. "Look at this saboteur! To laugh or to cry? What
    more can you say, there is nothing to add to these photos...." wrote
    Azerbaijani opposition news site haqqin.az.

    Some Azerbaijani sources, however, clung to the notion that
    Khojayan was in fact a special forces soldier. An Azerbaijani
    veteran of the Karabakh war told Baku newspaper Yeni Musavat that
    Khojayan's appearance was "camouflage" and that that is how members
    of intelligence units look, the BBC reported. But for the most
    part, people in the Azerbaijan government know that the story is
    embarrassing and just want it to go away, one well-placed Baku source
    told The Bug Pit. The Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs did
    not respond to a request for comment. But Khojayan remains in Baku,
    with local representatives of the International Committee of the Red
    Cross monitoring his treatment.

    Meanwhile, the situation continues to be tense. While the opposing
    ministries of defense have reported a recent decrease in ceasefire
    violations, the International Crisis Group have warned that "[t]he
    nature of the reported clashes and ominous statements by some
    government officials mark an escalation unprecedented in recent
    years." But with misinformation abounding, it's hard to know what's
    happening on the ground.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/68002

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