Daily Sabah (Turkey)

How Azerbaijan kept the memory of Khojaly alive

- HAMZA KARCIC* *Associate professor at the Faculty of Political Science at the University of Sarajevo

During the Azerbaijan­i-Armenian war over Nagorno-Karabakh (1992–1994), one particular location was to emerge as the site of a major tragedy. In late February 1992, Armenian forces attacked the village of Khojaly in an attempt to take control of a nearby airfield. Khojaly had been under a blockade for a few months and was only lightly defended. As the village was attacked and its Azerbaijan­i inhabitant­s started to flee, they were gunned down by Armenian forces. Several hundred perished in this atrocity, which has since been termed the single worst massacre in the NagornoKar­abakh war.

Khojaly, which emerged as the site of Azerbaijan­i suffering during the war in the early 1990s, has been annually commemorat­ed since. Over the past years, Azerbaijan­is across the globe have been undertakin­g efforts to commemorat­e the tragedy internatio­nally. These atrocities have been a sorrowful wound in the Azerbaijan­i collective memory ever since. Azerbaijan­i diplomacy has since sought to disseminat­e informatio­n on Khojaly to achieve internatio­nal recognitio­n and condemnati­on of this atrocity. Azerbaijan undertook efforts to internatio­nally institutio­nalize the memory of the Khojaly massacre by making the commemorat­ion of this event an integral part of its foreign policy. A series of events, rallies and photo exhibition­s dedicated to the Khojaly victims have taken place in locations from Turkey to Mexico. A series of monuments commemorat­ing Khojaly has similarly sprung up in Europe, from Bosnia to the Netherland­s.

The quest for internatio­nal recognitio­n and commemorat­ion of the atrocities takes several forms including (i) annual commemorat­ion of the tragedy of Khojaly in cities around the world, (ii) the adoption by national parliament­s of resolution­s on Khojaly, and (iii) the constructi­on of memorials and monuments dedicated to the Khojaly victims.

COMMEMORAT­IONS

A prominent way of rememberin­g Khojaly victims is the annual commemorat­ion of the tragedy organized every February. Over the past several years, the February commemorat­ion of Khojaly has been taking place in an increasing number of countries. The annual commemorat­ion takes different forms including photo exhibition­s on Khojaly and public rallies. In 2009, a photo exhibition marking the anniversar­y of the Khojaly massacre was held in the European Parliament in Brussels. It was upported by the Heydar Aliyev Foundation. In Indonesian capital Jakarta, the Azerbaijan­i embassy organized a photo exhibition and screened a documentar­y in February 2010. A similar photo exhibition was organized by the Azerbaijan­i Embassy in Japan in 2013.

On the occasion of the 20th anniversar­y of Khojaly Massacre, a rally was held in Istanbul’s Taksim Square, where an estimated 100,000 people took part. This was the largest protest held outside Azerbaijan. Similar demonstrat­ions were also held in Ankara and other Turkish cities.

A major public awareness campaign was held in the U.S. in February 2013. Organized by the Azerbaijan American Alliance, the campaign included posters reading, “Khojaly ... A Human Tragedy Against Azerbaijan,” that appeared in nine metro stations in the Washington, D.C. area. Furthermor­e, mobile projection­s of the posters on buildings and mobile billboards were also featured in the campaign.

PARLIAMENT­ARY RESOLUTION­S

As of mid-2013, an increasing number of national parliament­s have passed resolution­s condemning the Khojaly massacre. According to Azerbaijan­i media reports, resolution­s had been passed in Pakistan, Columbia, Mexico, Turkey, Bosnia, Serbia, Romania and the Czech Republic. According to Azerbaijan­i media reports from early July 2013, the Senate of Jordan also condemned the atrocities.

In the U.S., state legislatur­es in Arkansas, Mexico, Massachuse­tts, Texas, New Jersey, Georgia and Maine adopted resolution­s on Khojaly. In the U.S. Congress, legislator­s friendly to Azerbaijan have issued statements for congressio­nal record rememberin­g the Khojaly victims. Several years ago, a petition urging the White House to commemorat­e Khojaly received more than 125,000 signatures. Several legislator­s in the U.S. Congress have also commemorat­ed Khojaly in their speeches or remarks for the congressio­nal record, which began in 2005.

In February that year, Congressma­n Dan Burton said: “Khojaly was a little known small town in Azerbaijan until February 1992. Today it no longer exists, and for people of Azerbaijan and the region, the word ‘Khojaly’ has become synonymous with pain, sorrow and cruelty.” In the 110th Congress (2007–2008), there were four “extensions of remarks” on Khojaly. The 111th Congress (2009–2010) had six such statements while the 112th Congress (2011–2012) had 10 statements on Khojaly. The Khojaly tragedy has also been commemorat­ed in the Balkans. In Bosnia-Herzegovin­a, the House of Representa­tives adopted a resolution “respecting and acknowledg­ing the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of the Republic of Azerbaijan.” A similar proposal was tabled in the upper house (Dom Naroda) on Feb. 26, 2013. This resolution expressed support for Azerbaijan’s territoria­l integrity and called for an immediate and unconditio­nal withdrawal of Armenian troops from occupied Azerbaijan­i territorie­s. It further condemned the atrocities against the civilian population in the town of Khojaly.

The ongoing fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh stirs up memories of Khojaly. Here is a look at how Baku has sought to internatio­nally commemorat­e the crime committed almost three decades ago

MEMORIALS

Khojaly is also commemorat­ed through the constructi­on of monuments and memorials dedicated to victims. Memorials to Khojaly were opened in Berlin, The Hague and Mexico City. The memorial in Mexico City became contentiou­s in 2012. A gift of Azerbaijan, the restoratio­n of a park in Mexico City included a statue of Azerbaijan’s first president, Heydar Aliyev. Though such statues were also set up in Ukraine, Russia, Egypt, Turkey, Georgia, Serbia and Romania, in Mexico City there was a grass-roots campaign to remove the statue. Azerbaijan’s embassy in Washington blamed the discontent on Armenian activists in Mexico. In the Balkans, the Heydar Aliyev Foundation initiated the constructi­on of the Khojaly memorial in Bosnia-Herzegovin­a. The Azerbaijan­i-Bosnian friendship park in Sarajevo, which opened in late February 2012, is dedicated to the victims of the war in Bosnia and the victims of Khojaly.

The frozen conflict that had been neglected by many for years has captured global attention over the past week. The perils of the separatism of the 1990s are all too clear.

 ??  ?? People grieve over the massacre of ethnic Azerbaijan­is by Armenians in the town of Khojaly, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan, February 1992.
People grieve over the massacre of ethnic Azerbaijan­is by Armenians in the town of Khojaly, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan, February 1992.

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