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  • Intimidation against Nagorno-Karabakh

    Intimidation against Nagorno-Karabakh

    The Guardian, Wednesday 5 February 2014 21.01 GMT

    I am deeply concerned by the response of Fakhraddin Gurbanov,
    Azerbaijan's ambassador to the UK (Letter, 30 January), to Anastasia
    Taylor-Lind's interview and photograph (My best shot, 24 January)
    showing a wedding in the historically Armenian enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. I've visited Nagorno-Karabakh 80 times, many during
    the bitter war from 1991 to 1994, and I witnessed Azerbaijan's
    attempted ethnic cleansing of Armenians, including firing 400 GRAD
    missiles a day on the civilians in the capital city of Stepanakert,
    and numerous atrocities, including the slaughter of civilians in the
    village of Maragha in 1992. I saw the homes still smoldering,
    decapitated corpses, charred human remains, and survivors in shock. In
    a nearby hospital I met the chief nurse who had lost 14 members of her
    extended family including her son, whose head had been sawn off. As Mr
    Gurbanov suggested Ms Taylor-Lind should widen her perspective by
    speaking to displaced peoples within Azerbaijan, so I suggest he speak
    to the survivors of Maragha. Azerbaijan's aggression against
    Nagorno-Karabakh has turned into a policy of attempted attrition
    through economic and military intimidation, with aggressive propaganda
    threatening further military offensives. This policy prolongs the
    suffering of civilians displaced by the conflict - both Azeris and
    Armenians, leaving many in limbo and in poverty.

    If Azerbaijan's government removes the threat of renewed military
    action, supports the shaky ceasefire and pursues confidence-building
    measures, then perhaps opportunities for peace-building could develop,
    including provision for displaced peoples to return to their homes - a
    matter about which the ambassador claims to feel so strongly.


    Caroline Cox
    House of Lords


    * The ambassador of Azerbaijan says that Taylor-Lind should visit
    Azerbaijan to see the plight of displaced people there. It is not that
    easy. Even a short visit to Azerbaijan requires a visa, photos, a
    letter of invitation, a confirmed hotel booking and an eye-watering
    minimum visa fee of £100. It is also disingenuous to says that anyone
    wishing to visit NK should do so through Azerbaijani authorities. You
    can only visit NK from Armenia and if you have a NK visa in your
    passport you will be barred from visiting Azerbaijan.

    Joseph Cocker

    Leominster, Herefordshire

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/05/intimidation-nagorno-karabakh-azerbaijan

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