Thursday, June 20, 2013


Azerbaijan

Passions, History Run Deep In Safarov Case

Azerbaijani military officer Ramil Safarov is now back in Baku after serving time in a Hungarian jail for murder.
Azerbaijani military officer Ramil Safarov is now back in Baku after serving time in a Hungarian jail for murder.
TEXT SIZE - +
By Daisy Sindelar and  Arife Kazimova
The details of the crime seem anything but heroic: a young lieutenant hacking a fellow soldier to death in his sleep, with an ax he had stealthily purchased hours before.

But for many people in the South Caucasus nation of Azerbaijan, the picture is not so simple.

Not when the assailant is an Azerbaijani whose hometown was brutally seized by Armenian forces while he was still a teenager.

Not when the victim is an Armenian who allegedly insulted the Azerbaijani flag.

And not when the circumstances that threw them together were conceived by Western officials who had failed to consider the depths of the two sides' regional animosity.

So when Ramil Safarov returned home on August 31 after eight years in a Hungarian jail for the 2004 murder of Gurgen Margarian at a NATO Partnership for Peace exercise, many Azerbaijanis were unstinting in their welcome:

"I think he was a hero, because he protected the honor and dignity of the Azerbaijani people," one woman told RFE/RL on the streets of Baku. Another resident of the Azerbaijani capital said Safarov "did the right thing" in killing Margarian.

On the other hand, Safarov's extradition from Hungary last week outraged Armenians and surprised many onlookers with the lavish gestures that followed.

The 35-year-old lieutenant was not only granted an immediate pardon from his life sentence, he was also promoted to the rank of major, promised back pay, and presented with a free apartment.

Azerbaijani Defense Minister Safar Abiyev offered no rationale for the promotion, simply congratulating Safarov on his return to Azerbaijan and wishing him success in his future activities in the military sector.

Anti-Armenian Invective

Local newspapers added to the fanfare, with headlines crowing that Safarov's release "will improve the psychological mood of society" and calling him "a hero for the entire Muslim world."

Safarov's conviction as a calculating ax murderer did little to temper most Azerbaijanis' enthusiasm. If anything, the gruesome nature of his crime only added to his appeal in a country where the public narrative has been shaped to portray Safarov as the victim and Margarian as the taunting aggressor.

Many Azerbaijanis repeat the theory that Margarian had urinated on the Azerbaijani flag or used it to polish his shoes. Others allege that the Armenian was not even asleep when the attack took place, and that he had provoked the attack.

No evidence from Safarov's 2006 trial in Budapest suggests either claim is true. But some Azerbaijani observers say the legacy of the Nagorno-Karabakh war and a steady diet of government anti-Yerevan invective have combined to cement an almost pathological hatred of Armenians in the minds of many Azerbaijanis.

"It's not only the Armenian soldiers and officers who are occupying our land that Azerbaijanis consider their enemy," says Baku-based political analyst Zardusht Alizadeh. "It's not only the 'Armenian terrorists' who were killed in the fighting. Because of a very skillfully constructed propaganda campaign, it's all Armenians who are considered the enemy. That's why a man who killed an Armenian in his sleep is automatically categorized as a hero."

WATCH: A vox pop from the streets of Baku on Ramil Safarov's release
Loading
12:00:00 / -:--:--

The 1988-94 war over Nagorno-Karabakh -- an Armenian-majority region within Azerbaijani territory -- ended with the deaths of tens of thousands on each side and the displacement of hundreds of thousands more.

It also left the region and surrounding territories under Armenian control -- for Baku, an unacceptable territorial loss of some 20 percent.

Nearly two decades later, the unresolved dispute remains the focus of international negotiations whose partners, including the United States and Russia, have frowned at Azerbaijan's zealous embrace of Safarov.

But Azerbaijan -- whose dynastic leader, Ilham Aliyev, is seen as using his country's massive oil wealth to buy silence on his authoritarian practices -- has shrugged off such criticism as hypocritical meddling.

Many in the country argue that the international community remained silent when a case similar to Safarov's unfolded years earlier in Armenia.

In 2001, Yerevan welcomed home Varoujan Garabedian, a Syrian-born ethnic Armenian militant who killed eight people in a 1983 bomb attack on a Turkish Airlines check-in desk at France's Orly airport.

Following a massive lobbying campaign by the Armenian government and diaspora leaders, Garabedian was deported to Armenia after serving 17 years of a life sentence in France. Armenia's then prime minister, Andranik Markarian, expressed "joy" at Garabedian's release.*

'Radical Elements Are The Only Winners'

Erkin Gaderli, a lawyer and a member of the Republican Alternative opposition group, says he believes "no one" in Azerbaijan "seriously" thinks of Safarov as a hero.

But at the same time, he acknowledges that ordinary Azerbaijanis are confounded by the continued deadlock over Nagorno-Karabakh, and have fallen into a tit-for-tat relationship with Armenia, with each side looking to best the other on even insignificant issues.

"There is an emotion growing in society, and it's a reflection of a deep frustration with the conflict in the occupied territories," Gaderli says. "And there is a growing expectation that somehow, someday this must come to an end. Many people think that something needs to be done in response to Armenia. So whatever Armenia has done, for good or for bad, should somehow be retaliated."

There are suggestions that Armenia may already be prepared to raise the stakes, with the parliament in Yerevan now considering a hastily submitted bill on recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent country.

The outcome of such a provocation is worrisome to many who fear the countries will return to a war footing.

Even without a resumption of violence, some observers find the Safarov case a depressing development in a year when Azerbaijan has attempted to buff its Western credentials by playing Eurovision host and joining the UN Security Council.

In a piece published by the BBC's Russian Service, Thomas de Waal, a South Caucasus expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, wrote that the affair struck a blow to many activists and officials in Azerbaijan who have spent years quietly building a dialogue with Armenia. 

With Safarov's hero-sized welcome such critical efforts may now be lost. "After the authorities in Baku met the killer with open arms, the country's image has suffered enormous damage," he wrote. "Unfortunately, the only winners are the radical elements on both sides."

* CORRECTION: The text has been amended to remove reference to Garabedian being pardoned upon his return to Armenia. He was released from a French prison after serving 17 years of a life sentence and deported to Armenia, but received no official pardon. 

Written and reported by Daisy Sindelar in Prague with additional reporting from Baku by Arife Kazimova
This forum has been closed.
Comment Sorting
Comments page of 3
 Previous   Next 
by: Lydia from: USA
September 05, 2012 23:23
This article is one sided propaganda. Do the editor's of RFE/RL read or verify the facts what is reported before publishing it? Is this venue to change people's minds, perception or misrepresent history and even now days happenings? Most of the article is written with wrong data and only azeries have been interviewed? You think you are doing a service to them? If someone has even a common knowledge of what is going on, will see how poor, incorrect and misrepresented this article and its contents are, and it shows how blood hungry and vile azeries are when they say the killing is "Just". Are you writing about human beings? Shame on you FRE/RL.

by: Ashot from: Earth
September 06, 2012 01:01

As an Armenian I was not going to admit this, but our narrow mindedness can cause us to loose insight, I think this is our victory, Armenians should not grieve, we must do all to keep the Aliyev family in power. Read this analysis

Armenian diaspora assists Aliyev to score political points.
http://www.crescent-online.net/2012/09/armenian-diaspora-assists-aliyev-to-score-political-points-crescent-onlinenet-3255-articles.html

by: musa from: Baku
September 06, 2012 01:15
İ can not belive Kazimva contributed to this article! RFERL english is doing nothing but progating against Azerbaijan. Some people sitting in the officer has some deep hate towards Azerbaijani people!

by: Kevin from: Seattle
September 06, 2012 01:41
Sobering. This is reminiscent of the famous 'man on the street' interviews in Nazi Berlin during WWII. My Jewish grandmother survived that, but it is haunting to hear such cold and banal barbarity in modern times. Outside of North Korea, Azerbaijan may be the only other place. May whatever deity these people believe in have mercy on them.

by: john
September 06, 2012 02:40
The racist Azerbaijani nationalist psyche must be censured, not encouraged. This article, full of excuses and equivocations, does the latter. At least its ugliness is put on full display in the video.

by: minas
September 06, 2012 04:14
This is not the kind of article I would expect from an azerbaijani journalist. Instead of an unequivocal condemnation of what is going on in that country, once again the same justifications are presented this time under the disguise of presenting the mainstream opinion.
BTW, Varoujan Garabedian was pardoned by the French after being 17 years in jail, the Armenian government had never lobbied for his release, he has never been welcomed as a hero by people and nobody gave him flat, in fact, the overwhelming majority of people in Armenia don't even know him.

by: An Observer from: DC
September 06, 2012 04:35
What a shamefully biased propaganda piece in favor of the murderer scum Ramil Safarov and his nation! Shame on you for your hack journalism RFERL!!!

by: fuad from: baku
September 06, 2012 08:19
Want you see what have seen Safarov? its ashort video made by C.Mustafev journalist which died in Karabakh war. not for kids:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRNL2wl6eP0
In Response

by: Camel Anaturk from: Kurdistan
September 06, 2012 13:11
fuad,allahtan,there is no clip at the address you post-we all know than you can never trust azeri kgbs like you,and we all have seen what a digrace to humanity police informers like you are,so try this address:AllahtanIlhanAzeriChenghizKhan.com.And dear RFE/RL,free speechers,why no comment sections on 3 of your news items on the subject?Afraid of too much comments to sort out?
In Response

by: Armenian from: US
September 13, 2012 01:36
If Armenians had recorded what you did with Armenians in Baku, Sumgait and rest of the country it would have good. Unfortunately there were no phone cameras and so on then So stop your BS!

by: We are all Gurgens from: Free Artsakh
September 07, 2012 01:45

I wonder how many buckets of Caspian caviar did it cost Baku to buy the advertisement space for this "news article"?

What a real shame! But I'm glad that everybody knows now that Azeri manats can by more then Hungarian Government, they can also buy "Radio Free Europe" that American taxpayers are billed for.

I would like to see an American free press advocacy group, not even an Armenian diaspora organization, filing a FOIA request to see how this article came about.

by: Ivanyan from: www.xocali.net
September 07, 2012 03:53

Where is the famous journalist profession's mantra - "if your mother says she loves you - question it"?

So, all these Azeri Turk propaganda myths somehow got drugged into the story after being proven lies in Hungarian court.

But even without this proof, anybody except the brainwashed Azeri Sultanate population can ask simple questions.

Where did the Armenian officer get an Azeri flag that nobody except the assassin ever saw? Do they sell these flags in grocery stores in Hungary or Armenia? So why would these "journalists" continue to spread the lies? I think there is only one explanation - it's profitable.

On the other hands, there is proof of purchase of an ax and a sharpening stone (!) by the murderer. Was he saving receipts for reimbursement by his government?

Why not write about this - all documented facts from the court case instead of Azeri Turk propaganda lies?

The authors are an embarrassment to the journalistic profession!

In Response

by: chung
September 08, 2012 21:49
You can't read very well:

"Many Azerbaijanis repeat the theory that Margarian had urinated on the Azerbaijani flag or used it to polish his shoes. Others allege that the Armenian was not even asleep when the attack took place, and that he had provoked the attack.

No evidence from Safarov's 2006 trial in Budapest suggests either claim is true."

Again, more hysterical Armenians who can't understand anything that isn't simple propaganda about how they were only victims and never committed any crimes. There were massacres on each side, arguing otherwise makes you seem ignorant and even deranged.
In Response

by: Anon from: USA
September 17, 2012 18:40
Chung, before you jump from your seat and accuse anyone of "hysteria", familiarize yourself with the process with which allegations in Azerbaijan are manufactured:

http://www.rferl.org/content/filling-in-the-gaps-azerbaijani-media-construction-of-narrative-over-ramil-safarov-case-armenia/24703619.html
In Response

by: chung
September 18, 2012 08:42
It is hysterical to claim that an article that presents the other side's claims as "spreading lies". I was simply pointing out that the article casts doubts on what the silly person above claims it's "spreading". What you say doesn't affect that.
Comments page of 3
 Previous   Next 

Most Popular