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What The Heck Is A Statue Of Azerbaijan's Former Dictator Doing In M

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  • What The Heck Is A Statue Of Azerbaijan's Former Dictator Doing In M

    WHAT THE HECK IS A STATUE OF AZERBAIJAN'S FORMER DICTATOR DOING IN MEXICO CITY?

    Fusion.net, Florida
    Jan 13 2015

    By Rafa Fernandez De Castro

    You know when a distant relative gives you some particularly awful
    piece of art that you can't exactly throw away but you don't want to
    display too prominently where someone might actually notice it and
    quietly question your mental health?

    Mexico has that problem, thanks to an imperious-looking statue of
    Azerbaijan's former Soviet-era leader Heydar Aliyev, which gazes
    wistfully towards the horizon, pondering the contributions of the
    lumpenproletariat, or something like that.

    The statue of the old communist leader, first given to the Mexican
    government in 2012, has become somewhat of a headache for Mexican
    officials, who have quietly tried to shuffle it around the capital
    in hopes of finding a place to put it where no one will notice.

    The statue was originally placed in a park overseeing the city's busy
    Reforma Avenue, but quickly removed after some residents complained
    the monument glorified the legacy of a dictator.

    Mexico City residents and members of the Armenian expat community
    blame the former Azerbaijani leader, who died in 2003, of committing
    human-rights abuses, censoring the media and promoting his cult of
    personality with an iron fist during his tenure.

    Bowing to pressure, Mexico City then-Mayor Marcelo Ebrad removed the
    statue and stuck it in a warehouse until he could think of a Plan B.

    He couldn't. But getting rid of it permanently has proven difficult;
    Azerbaijan's Ambassador to Mexico threatened to suspend his nation's
    $4 billion worth of investments and cut diplomatic ties if the state
    removed the statue from display.

    Now, the new mayor of Mexico City thinks he's come up with a solution.

    Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera announced last week that his administration
    will give the Azerbaijani government a piece of prime real estate in
    the opulent Lomas de Chapultepec neighborhood where the statue can
    be displayed in all its glory on private property.

    But Mayor Mancera may have spoken too fast, since he doesn't have
    the authority to give land to a foreign government without permission
    from the Foreign Ministry.

    Meanwhile, activists who were instrumental in the removal of the
    statue in the first place are still fighting to remove a marble
    map from the base of the disfigured monument that awards Azerbaijan
    territory that's under dispute with Armenia.

    http://fusion.net/story/38059/what-the-heck-is-a-statue-of-azerbaijans-former-dictator-doing-in-mexico-city/

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