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WORLD MEDIA
REPORTS:
Newsweek
(November 29, 1993, p. 50)
"Armenians
occupy a quarter of Azerbaijan's territory, and they've
displaced almost a million Azerbaijani civilians. Friends
of Armenia's powerful lobby in Washington, including
the U.S. Government are suddenly a bit aghast. 'What
we see now is a systematic destruction of every village
in their way' says a senior state department official.
It's vandalism."
THE
GUARDIAN, 2
September 1993
NOWHERE TO HIDE FOR AZERI REFUGEES
Armenia is
pushing a new wave of displaced people towards Iran.
Jonathan
RUGMAN in Kanliq, south-west Azerbaijan, reports
On the main
road south through Kubatli province, thousands of men,
women and children are packed into trucks at an Azeri
checkpoint waiting for permission to leave. Helicopters
shuttle in and out with the wounded, while a group of
women sit wailing at the roadside, tearing at their
bloodstained faces with their fingernails in a frenzy
of grief.
A new exodus
of refugees is under way towards Azerbaijan's border
with Iran as Armenia forces continue ignoring United
Nations demands that they stop their offensive.
This week
the UNHCR began distributing 4,000 tents and 50,000
blankets to those displaced in the recent hostilities.
The organisation said about 250,000 Azeris have been
displaced so far this year and about 1 million since
the massacre began in 1988.
Newsweek 16 March 1992
By Pascal Privat with Steve Le Vine in Moscow
THE FACE OF A MASSACRE
"Azerbaijan
was a charnel house again last week: a place of mourning
refugees and dozens of mangled corpses dragged to a
makeshift morgue behind the mosque. They were ordinary
Azerbaijani men, women and children of Khojaly, a small
village in war-torn Nagorno-Karabakh overrun by Armenian
forces on Feb. 25-26. Many were killed at close range
while trying to flee; some had their faces mutilated,
others were scalped. While the victims' families mourned,"
The New York Times,
Tuesday, March 3, 1992
MASSACRE BY ARMENIANS
Agdam, Azerbaijan,
March 2 (Reuters) - Fresh evidence emerged today of
a massacre of civilians by Armenian militants in Nagorno-Karabakh,
a predominantly Armenian enclave of Azerbaijan.
Scalping
Reported
Azerbaijani
officials and journalists who flew briefly to the region
by helicopter brought back three dead children with
the back of their heads blown off. They said shooting
by Armenians has prevented them from retrieving more
bodies.
"Women
and children have been scalped," said Assad Faradshev,
an aide to Nagorno-Karabakh's Azerbaijani Governor.
"When we began to pick up bodies, they began firing
at us."
The Azerbaijani
militia chief in Agdam, Rashid Mamedov, said: "The
bodies are lying there like flocks of sheep. Even the
fascists did nothing like this."
Truckloads
of Bodies
Near Agdam
on the outskirts of Nagorno-Karabakh, a Reuters photographer,
Frederique Lengaigne, said she had seen two trucks filled
with Azerbaijani bodies.
"In
the first one I counted 35, and it looked as though
there were as many in the second," she said. "Some
had their head cut off, and many had been burned. They
were all men, and a few had been wearing khaki uniforms."
The Sunday Times 1 March 1992
By Thomas Goltz, Agdam, Azerbaijan
ARMENIAN SOLDIERS MASSACRE HUNDREDS OF FLEEING FAMILIES
Survivors
reported that Armenian soldiers shot and bayoneted more
than 450 Azeris, many of them women and children. Hundreds,
possibly thousands, were missing and feared dead.
The attackers
killed most of the soldiers and volunteers defending
the women and children. They then turned their guns
on the terrified refugees. The few survivors later described
what happened: 'That's when the real slaughter began,'
said Azer Hajiev, one of three soldiers to survive.
'The Armenians just shot and shot. And then they came
in and started carving up people with their bayonets
and knives.'
'They were
shooting, shooting, shooting,' echoed Rasia Aslanova,
who arrived in Agdam with other women and children who
made their way through Armenian lines. She said her
husband, Kayun, and a son-in-law were massacred in front
of her. Her daughter was still missing.
One boy who
arrived in Agdam had an ear sliced off.
The survivors
said 2000 others, some of whom had fled separately,
were still missing in the gruelling terrain; many could
perish from their wounds or the cold.
By late yesterday,
479 deaths had been registered at the morgue in Agdam's
morgue, and 29 bodies had been buried in the cemetery.
Of the seven corpses I saw awaiting burial, two were
children and three were women, one shot through the
chest at point blank range.
Agdam hospital
was a scene of carnage and terror. Doctors said they
had 140 patients who escaped slaughter, most with bullet
injuries or deep stab wounds.
Nor were
they safe in Agdam. On friday night rockets fell on
the city which has a population of 150,000, destroying
several buildings and killing one person.
The Times,
2 March 1992
CORPSES LITTER HILLS IN KARABAKH
(ANATOL LIEVEN COMES UNDER FIRE WHILE FLYING TO INVESTIGATE
THE MASS KILLINGS OF REFUGEES BY ARMENIAN TROOPS)
As we swooped
low over the snow-covered hills of Nagorno-Karabagh
we saw the scattered corpses. Apparently, the refugees
had been shot down as they ran. An Azerbaijani film
of the places we flew over, shown to journalists afterwards,
showed DOZENS OF CORPSES lying in various parts of the
hills.
The Azerbaijanis
claim that AS MANY AS 1000 have died in a MASS KILLING
of AZERBAIJANIS fleeing from the town of Khodjaly, seized
by Armenians last week. A further 4,000 are believed
to be wounded, frozen to death or missing.
The civilian
helicopter's job was to land in the mountains and pick
up bodies at sites of the mass killings.
The civilian
helicopter picked up four corpses, and it was during
this and a previous mission that an Azerbaijani cameraman
filmed the several dozen bodies on the hillsides.
Back at the
airfield in Agdam, we took a look at the bodies the
civilian helicopter had picked up. Two old men a small
girl were covered with blood, their limbs contorted
by the cold and rigor mortis. They had been shot.
TIME,
March 16, 1992
By Jill SMOLOWE
Reported by Yuri ZARAKHOVICH/Moscow
MASSACRE IN KHOJALY
While the
details are argued, this much is plain: something grim
and unconscionable happened in the Azerbaijani town
of Khojaly two weeks ago. So far, some 200 dead Azerbaijanis,
many of them mutilated, have been transported out of
the town tucked inside the Armenian-dominated enclave
of Nagorno-Karabakh for burial in neighboring Azerbaijan.
The total number of deaths - the Azerbaijanis claim
1,324 civilians have been slaughtered, most of them
women and children - is unknown.
Videotapes
circulated by the Azerbaijanis include images of defaced
civilians, some of them scalped, others shot in the
head.
BBC1 Morning
News at 07.37, Tuesday 3 March 1992
"BBC
reporter was live on line and he claimed that he saw
more than 100 bodies of Azeri men, women and children
as well as a baby who are shot dead from their heads
from a very short distance."
BBC1 Morning
News at 08:12,
Tuesday 3 March 1992
"Very
disturbing picture has shown that many civilian corpses
who were picked up from mountain. Reporter said he,
cameraman and Western Journalists have seen more than
100 corpses, who are men, women, children, massacred
by Armenians. They have been shot dead from their heads
as close as 1 meter. Picture also has shown nearly ten
bodies (mainly women and children) are shot dead from
their heads. Azerbaijan claimed that more than 1000
civilians massacred by Armenian forces."
Channel
4 News at 19.00,
Monday 2 March 1992
"2 French
journalists have seen 32 corpses of men, women and children
in civilian clothes. Many of them shot dead from their
heads as close as less than 1 meter."
Report
from Karabakpress
A merciless
massacre of the civilian population of the small Azeri
town of Khojali (Population 6000) in Karabagh, Azerbaijan,
is reported to have taken place on the night of February
28 by the Soviet Armenian Army. Close to 1000 people
are reported to have been massacred. Elderly and children
were not spared. Many were badly beaten and shot at
close range. A sense of rage and helplessness has overwhelmed
the Azeri population in face of the well armed and equipped
Armenian Army. The neighboring Azeri city of Aghdam
outside of the Karabagh region has come under heavy
Armenian artillery shelling. City hospital was hit and
two pregnant women as well as a new born infant were
killed. Azerbaijan is appealing to the international
community to condemn such barbaric and ruthless attacks
on its population and its sovereignty.
Boston
Sunday Globe,
November 21, 1993
by Jon Auerbach
Globe Correspondent
CHAKHARLI,
Azerbaijan -- The truckloads of scared and lost children,
the sobbing mothers, the stench of sickness and the
sea of blank faces in this mud-covered refugee camp
obscure the deeper issue of why tens of thousands of
Azeris have fled here.
"What
we see now is a systematic destruction of every village
in their way," said one senior US official. "It's
one of the most disgusting things we've seen."
"It's
vandalism," the US official said. "The idea
that there is an aggressive intent in a sound conclusion."
The United
Nations estimates that there are more than 1 million
refugees in Azerbaijan, roughly one seventh of the former
Soviet republic's entire population. Thousands who fled
to neighboring Iran are being slowly repatriated to
refugee camps already bursting at the seams. But because
of the Karabakh Armenians' policy of burning villages,
relief organizations say there is no hope that the Azeris
could return home anytime soon.
At Chakharli,
about 10 miles from Iran, more than 10,000 refugees
are crammed into a makeshift tent city. Aziz Azizova,
33, arrived in the Iranian run camp about three weeks
ago, after she and her five children were forced to
flee their home in the village of Buik-Merjan.
"I left
my village with nothing, not even my shoes," she
said. "You see how our children are living? Some
of them are living right in the mud."
Azizova,
like thousands of others, escaped by fleeing across
the Arax River into neighboring Iran. The UN estimates
that around 300 Azeris, mainly women and children, drowned
in the river's currents.
One of the
people who did make it across was Samaz Mamedova, a
40-year-old accountant. Sitting with friends in tent
No. 566 on a recent day, Mamedova explained how the
Armenians seized her village in less than a half hour,
forcing the entire population toward the river in a
chaotic scramble for survival.
Cebbar
Leygara, Kurdish
Leader - October 13, 1992
"Today's
ethnic cleansing policies by the Serbians against Croatians
and Muslims of Yugoslavia, as well as the Soviet Republic
of Armenia's against the Muslim population of neighboring
Azerbaijan, are really no different in their aspirations
than the genocide perpetrated by the Armenian Government
78 years ago against the Turkish and Kurdish Muslims
and Sephardic Jews living in these lands."
Tofik
Kasimov Azeri
Leader - September 25, 1992
"The
crime of systematic cleansing by mass killing and extermination
of the Muslim population in Soviet Republic of Armenia,
Karabag, Bosnia and Herzegovina is an 'Islamic Holocaust'
comparable to the extermination of 2.5 million Muslims
by the Armenian Government during the WWI and of over
6 million European Jews during the WWII."
The Times,
3 March 1992
MASSACRE UNCOVERED
By ANATOL LIEVEN
More than
sixty bodies, including those of women and children,
have been spotted on hillsides in Nagorno-Karabakh,
confirming claims that Armenian troops massacred Azeri
refugees. Hundreds are missing.
Scattered
amid the withered grass and bushes along a small valley
and across the hillside beyond are the bodies of last
Wednesday's massacre by Armenian forces of Azerbaijani
refugees.
In all, 31
bodies could be counted at the scene. At least another
31 have been taken into Agdam over the past five days.
These figures do not include civilians reported killed
when the Armenians stormed the Azerbaijani town of Khodjaly
on Tuesday night. The figures also do not include other
as yet undiscovered bodies
Zahid Jabarov,
a survivor of the massacre, said he saw up to 200 people
shot down at the point we visited, and refugees who
came by different routes have also told of being shot
at repeatedly and of leaving a trail of bodies along
their path. Around the bodies we saw were scattered
possessions, clothing and personnel documents. The bodies
themselves have been preserved by the bitter cold which
killed others as they hid in the hills and forest after
the massacre.All are the bodies of ordinary people,
dressed in the poor, ugly clothing of workers.
Of the 31
we saw, only one policeman and two apparent national
volunteers were wearing uniform. All the rest were civilians,
including eight women and three small children. Two
groups, apparently families, had fallen together, the
children cradled in the women's arms.
Several of
them, including one small girl, had terrible head injuries:
only her face was left. Survivors have told how they
saw Armenians shooting them point blank as they lay
on the ground.
THE COMMITTEE
FOR PEOPLE'S HELP TO KARABAKH (OF THE) ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
OF THE AZERBAIJAN SSR - 1988
An Appeal
to Mankind
During the
last three years Azerbaijan and its multinational population
are vainly fighting for justice within the limits of
the Soviet Union. All humanitarian, constitutional human
rights guaranteed by the UN Charter, Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, Helsinki Agreements, Human Problems
International Forums, documents signed by the Soviet
Union - all of them are violated.
The USSR's
President, government bodies do not defend Azerbaijan
though they are all empowered to take necessary measures
to guarantee life and peace.
The 240,000
strong army of Armenian terrorists with Moscow's tacit
consent wages an undeclared war of annihilation against
Azerbaijan. As a result, a part of Azerbaijan has been
occupied and annexed, thousands of people killed, thousands
wounded.
Some 400,000
Azerbaijanis have been brutally and inhumanly deported
from the Armenian SSR, their historical homeland. Together
with them 64,000 Russians and 62,000 Kurds have also
been driven out, a part of them now settled in Azerbaijan.
Some 80,000 Turkish-Meskhetians, Lezghins and representatives
of other Caucasian nationalities who escaped from the
Central Asia where the President and government bodies
did not guarantee them the life and peace also suffered
from these deportations.
One of the
scandalous vandalisms directed not only against Azerbaijan
science but the world civilization as well is the Armenian
extremists' destruction of the Karabakh scientific experimental
base of The Institute of Genetics and Selection of the
Academy of Sciences of the Azerbaijan SSR.
We beg you
for humanitarian help and political assistance, for
the honour and dignity of 7 million Azerbaijanis are
violated, its territory, culture and history are trampled,
its people are shot. There is persistent negative image
of Azerbaijanians abroad, and this defamation is spread
over the whole world by Soviet mass media, Armenian
lobby in the USSR and the United States.
We are for
a united, indivisible, sovereign Azerbaijan, we are
for a common Caucasian home proclaimed in 1918 by one
of the founding fathers of the Azerbaijan Democratic
Republic - Muhammed Emin Rasulzade.
But all these
goals and expectations are trampled upon the Soviet
leadership in favour of the Armenian expansionists encouraged
by Moscow and intended to create a new '1,000 Year Reich'
- the 'Great Armenia' - by annexing the neighboring
lands.
The world
public opinion shed tears to save the whales, suffers
for penguins dying out in the Antarctic Continent.
But what
about the lives of seven million human beings? If these
people are Muslims, does it mean that they are less
valuable? Can people be discriminated by their colour
of skin or religion, by their residence or other attributes?
All people
are brothers, and we appeal to our brothers for help
and understanding. This is not the first appeal of Azerbaijan
to the world public opinion. Our previous appeals were
unheard. However, we still carry the hope that the truth
beyond the Russian and Armenian propaganda will one
day reveal the extent of our suffering and stimulate
at least as much help and compassion for Azerbaijan
as tendered to whales and penguins.
The Age,
Melbourne, 6/3/92
By Helen WOMACK - Agdam, Azerbaijan, Thursday
The exact
number of victims is still unclear, but there can be
little doubt that Azeri civilians were massacred by
Armenian Army in the snowy mountains of Nagorno-Karabakh
last week.
Refugees
from the enclave town of Khojaly, sheltering in the
Azeri border town of Agdam, give largely consistent
accounts of how Armenians attacked their homes on the
night of 25 February, chased those who fled and shot
them in the surrounding forests. Yesterday, I saw 75
freshly dug graves in one cemetery in addition to four
mutilated corpses we were shown in the mosque when we
arrived in Agdam late on Tuesday. I also saw women and
children with bullet wounds in a makeshift hospital
in a string of railway carriages.
Khojaly,
an Azeri settlement in the enclave mostly populated
by Armenians, had a population of about 6000. Mr. Rashid
Mamedov Commander of Police in Agdam, said only about
500 escaped to his town. "So where are the rest?"
Some might have taken prisoner, he said, or fled. Many
bodies were still lying in the mountains because the
Azeris were short of helicopters to retrieve them. He
believed more than 1000 had perished, some of cold in
temperatures as low as minus 10 degrees.
When Azeris
saw the Armenians with a convoy of armored personnel
carriers, they realised they could not hope to defend
themselves, and fled into the forests. In the small
hours, the massacre started.
Mr. Nasiru,
who believes his wife and two children were taken prisoner,
repeated what many other refugees have said - that troops
of the former Soviet army helped the Armenians to attack
Khojaly. "It is not my opinion, I saw it with my
own eyes."
The Washington
Post 2/28/92
Nagorno-Karabagh Victims Buried in Azerbaijani Town
"Refugees
claim hundreds died in Armenian Attack...Of seven bodies
seen here today, two were children and three were women,
one shot through the chest at what appeared to be close
range. Another 120 refugees being treated at Agdam's
hospital include many with multiple stab wounds."
The New
York Times,
3/6/92
A Final Goodbye in Azerbaijan
[Photo
by Associated Press]: "At
a cemetery in Agdam, Azerbaijan, family members and
friends grieved during the burial of victims massacred
by the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabagh. Chingiz Iskandarov,
right, hugged the coffin containing the remains of his
brother, one of the victims. A copy of Koran lay atop
the coffin."
The Washington
Post, 3/6/92
Final Embrace
[Photo
by Associated Press]: "Chingiz Iskenderov,
right, weeps over coffin holding the remains of his
brother as other relatives grieve at an Azarbaijani
cemetery yesterday amid burial of victims killed by
Armenians in Nagorno-Karabagh."
The Washington
Times, 3/2/92
Armenian Raid Leaves Azeris Dead or Fleeing
"...about
1,000 of Khojaly's 10,000 people were massacred by the
Armenian Army in Tuesdays attack. Azerbaijani television
showed truckloads of corpses being evacuated from the
Khocaly area."
The Independent,
2/29/92
By Helen Womack
"Elif
Kaban, a Reuter correspondent in Agdam, reported that
after a massacre on Wednesday, Azeris were burying scores
of people who died when Armenians overran the town of
Khojaly, the second-biggest Azeri settlement in the
area. 'The world is turning its back on what's happening
here. We are dying and you are just watching,' one mourner
shouted at a group of journalists."
Reuters,
2/12/92
Armenians Burn Azeri Village
"Armenian
Army attacked a strategic Azeri village...in Nagorno-Karabagh
and burned it to the ground on Tuesday, Commonwealth
television reported.
Channel one
television said the village of Malybeili, in the Khodzhalin
district, was now cut off and a large number of wounded
were left stranded.
Itar-Tass
news agency said several people were killed and 20 wounded
in the attack on the village... Tass also said shells
fired from Armenian villages into the Azeri populated
town of Susha, just 6 miles south of Stepenakert, demolished
two houses and damaged five others."
The Washington
Times, 3/3/92
Massacre Reports Horrify Azerbaijan
"Azeri
officials who returned from the scene to this town about
nine miles away brought back three dead children, the
backs of their heads blown off...'Women and children
had been scalped,' said Assad Faradzev, an aide to Karabagh's
Azeri governor. Azeri television showed pictures of
one truckload of bodies brought to the Azeri town of
Agdam, some with their faces apparently scratched with
knives or their eyes gouged out."
The Washington
Post, 3/3/92
Killings Rife in Nagorno-Karabagh
"Journalists
in the area reported seeing dozens of corpses, including
some of the civilians, and Azerbaijani officials said
Armenians began shooting at them when they sought to
recover the bodies."
The Times,
(London) 3/3/92
Bodies Mark Site of Karabagh Massacre
"A local
truce was enforced to allow the Azerbaijanis to collect
their dead and any refugees still hiding in the hills
and forest. All are the bodies of ordinary people, dressed
in the poor, ugly clorhing of workers...All the rest
were civilians, including eight women and three small
children. Two groups, apparently families, had fallen
together, the children cradled in the women's arms.
Several of them, including one small girl, had terrible
head injuries: only her face was left. Survivors have
told how they saw Armenians shooting them point blank
as they lay on the ground."
The SUNDAY
TIMES, 8 March
1992
Thomas Goltz, the first to report the massacre by
Armenian soldiers,
reports from Agdam.
Khojaly used
to be a barren Azeri town, with empty shops and treeless
dirt roads. Yet it was still home to thousands of Azeri
people who, in happier times, tended fields and flocks
of geese. Last week it was wiped off the map.
As sickening
reports trickled in to the Azerbaijani border town of
Agdam, and the bodies piled up in the morgues, there
was little doubt that Khojaly and the stark foothills
and gullies around it had been the site of the most
terrible massacre since the Soviet Union broke apart.
I was the
last Westerner to visit Khojaly. That was in january
and people were predicting their fate with grim resignation.
Zumrut Ezoya, a mother of four on board the helicopter
that ferried us into the town, called her community
"sitting ducks, ready to get shot". She and
her family were among the victims of the massacre by
the Armenians on February 26.
"The
Armenians have taken all the outlying villages, one
by one, and the government does nothing." Balakisi
Sakikov, 55, a father of five, said. "Next they
will drive us out or kill us all," said Dilbar,
his wife. The couple, their three sons and three daughters
were killed in the massacre, as were many other people
I had spoken to.
"It
was close to the Armenian lines we knew we would have
to cross. There was a road, and the first units of the
column ran across then all hell broke loose. Bullets
were raining down from all sides. we had just entered
their trap."
The Azeri
defenders picked off one by one. Survivors say that
Armenian forces then began a pitiless slaughter, firing
at anything moved in the gullies. A video taken by an
Azeri cameraman, wailing and crying as he filmed body
after body, showed a grizzly trail of death leading
towards higher, forested ground where the villagers
had sought refuge from the Armenians.
"The
Armenians just shot and shot and shot," said Omar
Veyselov, lying in hospital in Agdam with sharapnel
wounds. "I saw my wife and daughter fall right
by me.
People wandered
through the hospital corridors looking for news of the
loved ones. Some vented their fury on foreigners: "
Where is my daughter, where is my son ?" wailed
a mother. "Raped. Butchered. Lost."
The Independent,
London, 12/6/92
Painful Search
The gruesome
extent of February's killings of Azeris by Armenians
in the town of Hojali is at last emerging in Azerbaijan
- about 600 men, women and children dead.
The State
Prosecutor, Aydin Rasulov, the cheif investigator of
a 15-man team looking into what Azerbaijan calls the
"Hojali Massacre", said his figure of 600
people dead was a minimum on preliminary findings. A
similar estimate was given by Elman Memmedov, the mayor
of Hojali. An even higher one was printed in the Baku
newspaper Ordu in May - 479 dead people named and more
than 200 bodies reported unidentified. This figure of
nearly 700 dead is quoted as official by Leila Yunusova,
the new spokeswoman of the Azeri Ministry of Defence.
FranCois
Zen Ruffinen, head of delegation of the International
Red Cross in Baku, said the Muslim imam of the nearby
city of Agdam had reported a figure of 580 bodies received
at his mosque from Hojali, most of them civilians. "We
did not count the bodies. But the figure sems reasonable.
It is no fantasy," Mr Zen Ruffinen said. "We
have some idea since we gave the body bags and products
to wash the dead."
Mr Rasulov
endeavours to give an unemotional estimate of the number
of dead in the massacre. "Don't get worked up.
It will take several months to get a final figure,"
the 43-year-old lawyer said at his small office.
Mr Rasulov
knows about these things. It took him two years to reach
a firm conclusion that 131 people were killed and 714
wounded when Soviet troops and tanks crushed a nationalist
uprising in Baku in January 1990.
Officially,
184 people have so far been certified as dead, being
the number of people that could be medically examined
by the republic's forensic department. "This is
just a small percentage of the dead," said Rafiq
Youssifov, the republic's chief forensic scientist.
"They were the only bodies brought to us. Remember
the chaos and the fact that we are Muslims and have
to wash and bury our dead within 24 hours."
Of these
184 people, 51 were women, and 13 were children under
14 years old. Gunshots killed 151 people, shrapnel killed
20 and axes or blunt instruments killed 10. Exposure
in the highland snows killed the last three. Thirty-three
people showed signs of deliberate mutilation, including
ears, noses, breasts or penises cut off and eyes gouged
out, according to Professor Youssifov's report. Those
184 bodies examined were less than a third of those
believed to have been killed, Mr Rasulov said.
"There
were too many bodies of dead and wounded on the ground
to count properly: 470-500 in Hojali, 650-700 people
by the stream and the road and 85-100 visible around
Nakhchivanik village," Mr Manafov wrote in a statement
countersigned by the helicopter pilot.
"People
waved up to us for help. We saw three dead children
and one two-year-old alive by one dead woman. The live
one was pulling at her arm for the mother to get up.
We tried to land but Armenians started a barrage against
our helicopter and we had to return."
There has
been no consolidation of the lists and figures in circulation
because of the political upheavals of the last few months
and the fact that nobody knows exactly who was in Hojali
at the time - many inhabitants were displaced from other
villages taken over by Armenian forces.
The Independent,
London, 12/6/92
Photographs: Liu Heung / AP
Frederique Lengaigne / Reuter
Aref Sadikov
sat quietly in the shade of a cafe-bar on the Caspian
Sea esplanade of Baku and showed a line of stitches
in his trousers, torn by an Armenian bullet as he fled
the town of Hojali just over three months ago, writes
Hugh Pope.
"I'm
still wearing the same clothes, I don't have any others,"
the 51-year-old carpenter said, beginning his account
of the Hojali disaster. "I was wounded in five
places, but I am lucky to be alive."
Mr Sadikov
and his wife were short of food, without electricity
for more than a month, and cut off from helicopter flights
for 12 days. They sensed the Armenian noose was tightening
around the 2,000 to 3,000 people left in the straggling
Azeri town on the edge of Karabakh.
"At
about 11pm a bombardment started such as we had never
heard before, eight or nine kinds of weapons, artillery,
heavy machine-guns, the lot," Mr Sadikov said.
Soon neighbours
were pouring down the street from the direction of the
attack. Some huddled in shelters but others started
fleeing the town, down a hill, through a stream and
through the snow into a forest on the other side.
To escape,
the townspeople had to reach the Azeri town of Agdam
about 15 miles away. They thought they were going to
make it, until at about dawn they reached a bottleneck
between the two Azeri villages of Nakhchivanik and Saderak.
"None
of my group was hurt up to then ... Then we were spotted
by a car on the road, and the Armenian outposts started
opening fire," Mr Sadikov said. Mr Sadikov said
only 10 people from his group of 80 made it through,
including his wife and militiaman son. Seven of his
immediate relations died, including his 67-year-old
elder brother.
"I only
had time to reach down and cover his face with his hat,"
he said, pulling his own big flat Turkish cap over his
eyes. "We have never got any of the bodies back."
The first
groups were lucky to have the benefit of covering fire.
One hero of the evacuation, Alif Hajief, was shot dead
as he struggled to change a magazine while covering
the third group's crossing, Mr Sadikov said.
Another hero,
Elman Memmedov, the mayor of Hojali, said he and several
others spent the whole day of 26 February in the bushy
hillside, surrounded by dead bodies as they tried to
keep three Armenian armoured personnel carriers at bay.
As the survivors
staggered the last mile into Agdam, there was little
comfort in a town from which most of the population
was soon to flee.
"The
night after we reached the town there was a big Armenian
rocket attack. Some people just kept going," Mr
Sadikov said. "I had to get to the hospital for
treatment. I was in a bad way. They even found a bullet
in my sock."
Victims of
massacre: An Azeri woman mourns her son, killed in the
Hojali massacre in February (left). Nurses struggle
in primitive conditions (centre) to save a wounded man
in a makeshift operating theatre set up in a train carriage.
Grief-stricken relatives in the town of Agdam (right)
weep over the coffin of another of the massacre victims.
Calculating the final death toll has been complicated
because Muslims bury their dead within 24 hours.
Newsweek,
November 29, 1993, p. 50
"For the past seven months Armenian troops and
tanks have swept across Azerbaijan -- a land grab exceeded
only by what the Serbs have accomplished in Bosnia in
the past year...Last month they pushed south all the
way to the Iranian border, driving more than 60,000
Azerbaijani civilians across the Araks river into Iran
-- and looting and torching vacant villages in their
wake."
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