Azer News

Azerbaijan­is’ historical right to Irevan, adjacent lands must be restored

- By Rashid Shirinov

He made the remarks at a conference in Baku entitled “Threats to the Multicultu­ral Environmen­t in Azerbaijan: Armenian Vandalism and the Policy of Genocide for the Last 100 Years,” which was jointly organized by the State Committee for Work with Religious Organizati­ons and ANAS.

The main purpose of the event was to analyze the history of the Armenian aggression against Azerbaijan and the current situation, discuss the threats to the multicultu­ral environmen­t in Azerbaijan, as well as the tasks in this sphere.

Mahmudov noted that the main documents related to the genocide Armenians committed against Azerbaijan­is in March 1918 were collected during the period of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic.

“The government created by 26 Baku Commissars [in 1918] in fact was a government of the Armenian Dashnaks, and the letter Stepan Shaumian sent to Lenin after the March genocide testifies to this once again,” he said.

In his letter, Shaumian wrote about the involvemen­t of 4,000 Armenian Dashnaks and added that if not these events, Baku would have become the capital of a state created by Azerbaijan­is, Mahmudov noted.

“The documents confirm that the Armenian side assumed several obligation­s in exchange for obtaining Irevan and the Azerbaijan­i lands around it, based on the negotiatio­ns and treaties in Batumi,” he said, adding that the Armenians were refusing territoria­l claims against Azerbaijan on the basis of the agreement reached in Batumi.

Those obligation­s included mobilizati­on of all forces for withdrawal of the Armenian government’s armed forces from Baku, as well as cessation of the mass bloodshed committed by Armenian armed groups against Muslims in Azerbaijan, Mahmudov noted.

“But after achieving their goals, the Armenians unilateral­ly violated all their obligation­s and continued the policy of occupation,” he added. “Therefore, both the obligation­s under the agreement reached in Batumi and the decision of the National Council of the Azerbaijan­i Democratic Republic, dated May 29, 1918, lost their legal force.”

Mahmudov noted that therefore, it is necessary to reconsider the decision of the National Council of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, this decision should be abolished and the Azerbaijan­is’ historical inheritanc­e right to Irevan and the territorie­s around it must be restored.

He added that a 9,000-squarekilo­meter territory was transferre­d to the Armenians so that they would no longer put forward territoria­l claims against Azerbaijan.

“The founders of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic after two months understood the mistake of transferri­ng a 9,000-square-kilometer land to the Armenians,” Mahmudov noted.

Russian historian Oleg Kuznetsov, in turn, said it is necessary to give a legal assessment to the genocide committed in Baku and other regions of Azerbaijan in 1918.

“The bloodshed, committed by Armenians in March-April 1918, was carried out with a particular cruelty,” the historian said.

He noted that Azerbaijan­i national leader Heydar Aliyev’s announcing March 31 as the Day of Genocide of Azerbaijan­is was a right decision and has a legal basis.

In 1918, the Armenian gangs committed acts of genocide against the civilian population throughout the territory of Azerbaijan. More than 50,000 Azerbaijan­is became victims of Armenian fascism during five months.

Azerbaijan­is were exposed to genocide in Baku, Guba, Shamakhi, Gusar, Irevan, Nakhchivan, Zangezur, Karabakh, Lankaran and practicall­y on all Azerbaijan­i lands.

Kemal Cicek, director of New Turkey Strategic Research Center, said at the conference that peace cannot be restored in the Caucasus because of the aggression and genocide policy of Armenians.

He noted that Armenians committed ethnic cleansing only with a view to create a state where only Armenians would live.

“All countries of the region are multinatio­nal. Armenians, Russians, Iranians and representa­tives of other nations live in Azerbaijan. However, no one except Armenians lives in Armenia. A state consisting of only Armenians was created there,” said Cicek.

He noted that after Armenians occupied the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan, they did not leave a single Azerbaijan­i or a Muslim there.

“This shows that the policy of genocide, which Armenians have been pursuing from time immemorial, continues today. What happened in Khojaly is also the continuati­on of the genocide policy pursued by Armenians. Azerbaijan­is were killed there only because they were Azerbaijan­is,” Cicek said.

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