South Caucusus News
Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR, UK
Aug 28 2009
EUROVISION: AZERBAIJAN BACKS DOWN
Embarrassed government says Armenia song votes probe was a mistake.
By Elshan Mammadaliyev in Baku
The Azerbaijan security services' interrogation of people who voted
for Armenia in the Eurovision Song Contest was `a mistake by one
official', the government says, while commentators said the probe
humiliated the whole country.
In a move that got the country some unwelcome publicity, all 43
Azerbaijanis who sent a text message voting for the Armenian entry in
the continent-wide music contest in May were summoned to the Ministry
of National Security, MNS.
`When I was called to the MNS, I thought they were arresting me for
the strong criticism of President Ilham Aliyev I'd written on
Facebook. I had even forgotten that I'd voted for Armenia. When in the
MNS they started to interrogate me about this, I almost burst out
laughing,' said Rovshan Nasirli, who was called to the ministry on
August 12.
Relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan are very tense. The two
countries have never signed a peace treaty to end their 1991 war over
Nagorny-Karabakh, although a ceasefire was signed 15 years
ago. Armenian troops still occupy swathes of western Azerbaijan.
Nasirli described a scene reminiscent of the inquisition of a serious
criminal and said the interrogators tried to intimidate him.
`After they kept me for two hours in an empty room, two men came to
me, saying they worked for the main department of the MNS. One had a
list in his hand of all the people who voted for the Armenian entry,
and their addresses. They said that people like me should be sent to
prison. They said, `Today you vote for an Armenian, tomorrow you will
go to blow up the metro for them.''
The MNS refused to comment on the reasons for the campaign, but Novruz
Mamedov, head of the international department at the presidential
administration, said the affair had been whipped up out of all
proportion.
`Nothing special happened. There was no pressure applied to them. You
just have to bear in mind that Azerbaijan is still a very young
state. We have only been independent for 18 years, and not all our
officials have the required experience,' he said in a statement issued
to the APA news agency, in which he blamed the Armenians for stoking
hatred against his country.
`For hundreds of years many peoples have lived in peace in Azerbaijan,
including 20,000 Armenians. Why does no one talk about this? And a
mistake by one official is presented like a deliberate act by the
national government. This is just part of a negative campaign which
has been conducted against Azerbaijan for many years, and which is
encouraged by Armenia.'
But his attempts to calm the furore failed, with gossip about the
arrests appearing on Azeri blogs and web sites.
`I am sure this mistake was made by just one low-ranking official. And
harm was done to the whole country,' said Togrul Juvarli, a political
analyst.
`The political weight of this incident has been great. When it is
important to show the world that we are a civilised country, we behave
like this.'
Nasirli said he was shocked by how little public protest there had
been over the affair, and how the government was prepared to dismiss
as a `mistake' the summoning of dozens of young people.
`Every citizen should ask the question why illegal interrogation and
investigation are allowed in Azerbaijan. This could happen to everyone
because the officials do not respect the law,' he said.
`The MNS should occupy itself with more serious issues. I liked the
song, so I sent a text message. This is not betraying my homeland. If
only we could solve Karabakh with text messages.'
But he should not count on everyone defending him. Karabakh is a very
emotive issue in Azerbaijan, which is home to hundreds of thousands of
civilians displaced by the conflict, and Akif Nagi, chairman of the
organisation for the liberation of Karabakh, said Azeris should not
even send text messages in favour of their enemy.
`This is immoral. There is no place for tolerance in this
question. The position of the MNS is correct. However, the MNS
officials made a mistake in how they investigated the situation. They
acted very crudely, asking those who voted for the Armenians to come
in and putting pressure on them. Such people should have been
investigated and kept under surveillance so they didn't even suspect
it,' he said.
Elshan Mammadaliyev is a freelance journalist in Baku.
Aug 28 2009
EUROVISION: AZERBAIJAN BACKS DOWN
Embarrassed government says Armenia song votes probe was a mistake.
By Elshan Mammadaliyev in Baku
The Azerbaijan security services' interrogation of people who voted
for Armenia in the Eurovision Song Contest was `a mistake by one
official', the government says, while commentators said the probe
humiliated the whole country.
In a move that got the country some unwelcome publicity, all 43
Azerbaijanis who sent a text message voting for the Armenian entry in
the continent-wide music contest in May were summoned to the Ministry
of National Security, MNS.
`When I was called to the MNS, I thought they were arresting me for
the strong criticism of President Ilham Aliyev I'd written on
Facebook. I had even forgotten that I'd voted for Armenia. When in the
MNS they started to interrogate me about this, I almost burst out
laughing,' said Rovshan Nasirli, who was called to the ministry on
August 12.
Relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan are very tense. The two
countries have never signed a peace treaty to end their 1991 war over
Nagorny-Karabakh, although a ceasefire was signed 15 years
ago. Armenian troops still occupy swathes of western Azerbaijan.
Nasirli described a scene reminiscent of the inquisition of a serious
criminal and said the interrogators tried to intimidate him.
`After they kept me for two hours in an empty room, two men came to
me, saying they worked for the main department of the MNS. One had a
list in his hand of all the people who voted for the Armenian entry,
and their addresses. They said that people like me should be sent to
prison. They said, `Today you vote for an Armenian, tomorrow you will
go to blow up the metro for them.''
The MNS refused to comment on the reasons for the campaign, but Novruz
Mamedov, head of the international department at the presidential
administration, said the affair had been whipped up out of all
proportion.
`Nothing special happened. There was no pressure applied to them. You
just have to bear in mind that Azerbaijan is still a very young
state. We have only been independent for 18 years, and not all our
officials have the required experience,' he said in a statement issued
to the APA news agency, in which he blamed the Armenians for stoking
hatred against his country.
`For hundreds of years many peoples have lived in peace in Azerbaijan,
including 20,000 Armenians. Why does no one talk about this? And a
mistake by one official is presented like a deliberate act by the
national government. This is just part of a negative campaign which
has been conducted against Azerbaijan for many years, and which is
encouraged by Armenia.'
But his attempts to calm the furore failed, with gossip about the
arrests appearing on Azeri blogs and web sites.
`I am sure this mistake was made by just one low-ranking official. And
harm was done to the whole country,' said Togrul Juvarli, a political
analyst.
`The political weight of this incident has been great. When it is
important to show the world that we are a civilised country, we behave
like this.'
Nasirli said he was shocked by how little public protest there had
been over the affair, and how the government was prepared to dismiss
as a `mistake' the summoning of dozens of young people.
`Every citizen should ask the question why illegal interrogation and
investigation are allowed in Azerbaijan. This could happen to everyone
because the officials do not respect the law,' he said.
`The MNS should occupy itself with more serious issues. I liked the
song, so I sent a text message. This is not betraying my homeland. If
only we could solve Karabakh with text messages.'
But he should not count on everyone defending him. Karabakh is a very
emotive issue in Azerbaijan, which is home to hundreds of thousands of
civilians displaced by the conflict, and Akif Nagi, chairman of the
organisation for the liberation of Karabakh, said Azeris should not
even send text messages in favour of their enemy.
`This is immoral. There is no place for tolerance in this
question. The position of the MNS is correct. However, the MNS
officials made a mistake in how they investigated the situation. They
acted very crudely, asking those who voted for the Armenians to come
in and putting pressure on them. Such people should have been
investigated and kept under surveillance so they didn't even suspect
it,' he said.
Elshan Mammadaliyev is a freelance journalist in Baku.
TWO AZERBAIJANI MINISTERS TO VISIT ARMENIA
APA
Aug 28 2009
Azerbaijan
Baku. Kamala Guliyeva - APA. Minister of Youth and Sport of Azerbaijan
Azad Rahimov and Minister of Labor and Social Protection of Population,
President of Azerbaijan Judo Federation Fuzuli Alekperov will visit
Armenia, press service of the Ministry of Youth and Sport told APA.
They will discuss the organizational issues of participation of
Azerbaijani sportsmen in the European championship among the young
judokas in Armenia. The Azerbaijani officials will visit Armenia
before the tournament. They are expected to sign new agreement in
accordance with the agreement reached between the sport officials of
both countries during the world wrestling championship in Azerbaijan
in 2007.
According to the agreement, host country has to take serious
responsibility for the security of Azerbaijani sportsmen in Armenia. It
also considers creating of necessary condition for feeding with
information, for regular trainings, hanging of Azerbaijan's flag
among the flags of other countries during the tournament, raising the
Azerbaijan's flag, playing of national anthem and all participants'
standing up in the case of Azerbaijan's winning, participation
of journalists accredited by IOC, easy Internet access and other
issues. The agreement will be signed by the Ministry of Youth and
Sport of Azerbaijan, European Judo Federation, European Judo Committee,
European Olympic Committee and appropriate organizations of Armenia.
APA
Aug 28 2009
Azerbaijan
Baku. Kamala Guliyeva - APA. Minister of Youth and Sport of Azerbaijan
Azad Rahimov and Minister of Labor and Social Protection of Population,
President of Azerbaijan Judo Federation Fuzuli Alekperov will visit
Armenia, press service of the Ministry of Youth and Sport told APA.
They will discuss the organizational issues of participation of
Azerbaijani sportsmen in the European championship among the young
judokas in Armenia. The Azerbaijani officials will visit Armenia
before the tournament. They are expected to sign new agreement in
accordance with the agreement reached between the sport officials of
both countries during the world wrestling championship in Azerbaijan
in 2007.
According to the agreement, host country has to take serious
responsibility for the security of Azerbaijani sportsmen in Armenia. It
also considers creating of necessary condition for feeding with
information, for regular trainings, hanging of Azerbaijan's flag
among the flags of other countries during the tournament, raising the
Azerbaijan's flag, playing of national anthem and all participants'
standing up in the case of Azerbaijan's winning, participation
of journalists accredited by IOC, easy Internet access and other
issues. The agreement will be signed by the Ministry of Youth and
Sport of Azerbaijan, European Judo Federation, European Judo Committee,
European Olympic Committee and appropriate organizations of Armenia.
PanARMENIAN.Net
28.08.2009 17:28 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The World Bank's Board of Executive Directors
on August 27 approved a credit of US$ 36.6 million of additional
financing for the Lifeline Road Improvement Project for Armenia,
press office of the World Bank reports. This project will assist
the government of Armenia in its on-going efforts to drastically
improve accessibility of the country's main road network for the
rural population and to create employment. It will also help Armenia
mitigate the impacts of the global economic crisis on the country's
economy and the well-being of its population.
The additional financing will further scale-up activities under the
on-going original project to improve the condition of 140 km of roads.
Over the years, insufficient investment in the rehabilitation and
maintenance of lifeline roads has made the overall road quality poor,
and left some roads difficult to use and others completely impassable.
The poor conditions and inadequacy of the lifeline roads connecting
rural communities to the main highways affects many aspects of rural
life and means that business opportunities are lost, it's harder for
kids to get to school, and more difficult for people to get urgent
medical attention when they need it.
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