Lack of accountability and worldwide inattention to pogroms extended carte blanche to Azerbaijan to continue its anti-Armenian rhetoric and savagery, AAA states

ARM INFO
Feb 28 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.The Armenian Assembly of America has issued a statement on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of the first of Armenian pogroms in Azerbaijan.

The statement reads:  

"Today Armenians around the world commemorate the 34th anniversary of  the Sumgait pogrom, a vicious and premeditated massacre against the  Armenian population of the city on the Caspian Sea in what was then  Soviet Azerbaijan. The unprovoked slaughter of peaceful civilians,  which took place from February 26, 1988 until March 1, 1988, resulted  in horrific deaths, injuries, and forced evacuations. The facts of  the pogrom were widely documented and reported at the time, and  became part of a pattern that saw massive ethnic cleansing against  Armenians. 

"The Sumgait pogrom was followed by the deliberate targeting of  Armenians in Kirovabad (1988) and Baku (1990). The violent pogroms  were Azerbaijan's response to calls by Armenian residents for  Arstakh's self-determination. As a consequence, hundreds of thousands  of Armenians were forced to escape the massacres, and were also  deprived of access to their businesses, properties, other financial  resources, and cultural heritage sites.

"The appeals for Artsakh's self-determination were supported by  prominent human rights advocates inside and outside of the Soviet  Union in the 1980s, including by Nobel Prize-winning physicist and  dissident Andrei Sakharov, who stated that "Armenian people are again  facing the threat of genocide." Artsakh, which is inhabited by its  indigenous Armenian population who formed the overwhelming majority  of the people of the region, was handed over to Soviet Azerbaijan by  Bolshevik leader Joseph Stalin in 1921, shortly after the Armenian  Genocide. 

"A lack of accountability and worldwide inattention to the pogroms  extended carte blanche to Azerbaijan to continue its anti-Armenian  rhetoric and savagery. The 44-day war on Artsakh, started in the Fall  of 2020 by Azerbaijan, with the full and open support of Turkey and  jihadist mercenaries, once again brought to the forefront the human  rights abuses by dictators Ilham Aliyev and Recep Tayyip Erdogan.  Thousands of Armenians were killed and forcibly displaced during the  war, and were subjected to internationally banned cluster munitions,  lethal drones, and white phosphorus bombs. 

"Azerbaijan and Turkey still have not been held accountable by the  international community for their massacres of the Armenian people in  2020, 1988, or 1915. Instead, the two countries have ramped up their  spite and malice by waging yet another war – that of distorting facts  and abusing history. Because of their abysmal human rights records,  both governments have relied on the services of public relations  firms to whitewash their war crimes and abuses meted upon their  domestic populations. Columbia University's Institute for the Study  of Human Rights documented the atrocities committed in the 2020  Artsakh War. 

"On the 34th anniversary of the Sumgait pogrom, the Assembly  commemorates the lives that were tragically cut short on February 26,  1988, and condemns the continuous brutality and war against the  Armenian people. 

"The Assembly calls on the OSCE Minsk Group to resolve the issue of  Artsakh's self-determination by peaceful means, a process to which  the Aliyev regime agreed, but which it has undermined every step of  the way. Recognition and security for Artsakh, as well as direct U.S.  aid and support, are needed to prevent yet another genocide. Finally,  Turkey and Azerbaijan must be held accountable by the international  community once and for all."  

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS