Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Baku Announces The New York Times Journalist Persona Non Grata

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

  • BAKU: Baku Announces The New York Times Journalist Persona Non Grata

    BAKU ANNOUNCES THE NEW YORK TIMES JOURNALIST PERSONA NON GRATA

    AzerNews, Azerbaijan
    April 10 2015

    10 April 2015, 17:18 (GMT+05:00)
    By Mushvig Mehdiyev

    Baku included a journalist of The New-York Times on its list of
    undesirable persons held by Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry after the
    reporter made an illegal visit to the Azerbaijani territories under
    Armenia's occupation.

    Spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, Hikmet Hajiyev said the article
    by Seth Kugel, the New York Times journalist, distorted the real
    situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, showing a clear
    disrespect to the readers of the newspaper.

    "Kugel's action is also disrespectful to the rights of more than
    one million Azerbaijani refugees and internally displaced persons
    who suffered from bloody ethnic cleansing atrocities in the occupied
    territories. It is regrettable for The New-York Times to publish such
    an article," Hajiyev said.

    Writing about his illegal visit to Nagorno-Karabakh, and Shusha city
    in particular, Kugel titled his article "A warm welcome in the South
    Caucasus mountains", where he described the lifestyle and nature in
    the occupied Azerbaijani lands.

    Hajiyev said Kugel avoided deliberately to properly reflect certain
    facts -- looting of property in the occupied lands belonging to
    Azerbaijani people, the destruction of material culture samples and
    the Islamic monuments in his biased article written on order from
    the Armenian lobby.

    "I would like to remind the management of The New-York Times, which
    published that biased article about "tourist trips" to the occupied
    territories presenting it "safe for travelers", that its journalist
    failed to mention that such transnational crimes as human trafficking,
    production and sale of drugs, illicit arms trafficking, training of
    terrorists are organized in these territories," he concluded.

    Visiting the occupied lands without Baku's official permit is
    considered a violation of the country's law and a clear disrespect
    of its sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Foreign Ministry
    developed a special black list for all those who have failed to comply
    with Baku's requirements and made illegal visits to Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Azerbaijan's internationally recognized Nagorno-Karabakh territory
    has become a conflict zone following Armenia's aggression in the
    early 1990s. As a result of Armenia's armed invasion, 20 percent of
    Azerbaijan's territory fell under Armenia's occupation. Although the
    OSCE has attempted to foster a peaceful resolution to this conflict
    Armenia has remained persistent in its aggressive stance.

    http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/80282.html

Working...
X