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- Xref: sparky talk.politics.mideast:26314 soc.culture.soviet:12436
- Path: sparky!uunet!anatolia!zuma!sera
- From: sera@zuma.UUCP (Serdar Argic)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.mideast,soc.culture.soviet
- Followup-To: soc.culture.turkish
- Subject: Re: Crime and punishment/CH(G)...
- Message-ID: <9301272022@zuma.UUCP>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 93 20:22:41 EST
- Reply-To: sera@zuma.UUCP (Serdar Argic)
- References: <1993Jan24.003632.29866@pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu>
- Distribution: world
- Lines: 93
-
- In article <1993Jan24.003632.29866@pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu> viznyuk@pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu (Sergei Viznyuk) writes:
-
- >the situation maybe no different now.. I have
- >heard that only for the last half a year, more
- >than 10,000 Azerbajdzhanis moved to Moscow from
- >their independent homeland. Naturally, the
-
- Ovizzy. Wanna hear some caroling?
-
-
- Source: The Times, 2 March 1992
-
- CORPSES LITTER HILLS IN KARABAKH
-
- ANATOL LIEVEN COMES UNDER FIRE WHILE FLYING WITH AZERBAIJANI FORCES TO
- INVESTIGATE THE ALLEGED 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...
-
- Seven of us squatted in the cabin of an Azerbaijani M24 attack helicopter
- as we flew to investigate the claims of the mass killings. Suddenly there
- was a thump against the underside of the aircraft, a red flash of tracer
- ripped past the starboard wing, and the helicopter rocked sharply. We
- swung round, and there was a deafening burst of fire from the cannon
- under our wing as the helicopter crew returned fire.
-
- We had been fired on from an Armenian anti-aircraft post. We swung round
- again, tipped to starboard and appeared to dive straight down into a
- valley. The brown earth swooped around our heads, the helicopter swung
- round again and followed the contours of the ground. Our cannon fired
- repeated blasts.
-
- Later it emerged that a civilian helicopter that we had been escorting
- had landed successfully at Nakhichevanik in the east of the disputed
- enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, to pick up some of the dead. We had, in
- fact, been attacked both by ground fire and by an Armenian helicopter.
- I had seen the Armenian helicopter intermittently through the window,
- its cannons firing, but had thought - mistakenly - that it was on
- "our side". Our group of Western journalists had embarked on a
- search-and-rescue flight that had become a combat mission.
-
- Our flight consisted of the civilian passenger helicopter and two
- M24 Soviet attack helicopters in the Azerbaijani service, nicknamed
- flying crocodiles for their armour. Our party was in the second
- crocodile. The civilian helicopter's job was to land in the mountains
- and pick up bodies at sites of the mass killings. The attack helicopters
- were there to give covering fire if necessary.
-
- The operation showed a striking sign of the disintegration of the Soviet
- armed forces because our pilot was a Russian officer. An Azerbaijani
- official told us that there were now five former Soviet military
- helicopters -and their pilots- fighting for Azerbaijan. "They have
- signed contracts to fly for us," he said. The helicopter we engaged
- in combat was most probably flown by a brother-officer of our Russian
- pilot, but fighting for the Armenians.
-
- We had taken off just before 5pm on Saturday from Agdam airfield, an
- heated for the Armenian-controlled mountains of Karabakh, a sheer
- white wall in the distance. The civilian helicopter picked up four
- corpses, and it was during this and a previous mission that an
- Azerbaijani cameraman filmed the several the several dozen bodies
- on the hillsides. We then took off again in a hurry and speed back
- towards Azerbaijani lines. Azerbaijani gunners on the last hill before
- the plain - and safety - gazed up at us as we passed.
-
- Back at the airfield in Agdam, we took a look 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.
-
- What did our Russian pilot think of the tragedy, our close shave,
- and the war in Nagorno-Karabakh? He gave us CHEERFUL GRIN, POLITELY
- DECLINED TO ANSWER QUES TIONS, AND MARCHED OFF TO HIS DINNER.
-
- Serdar Argic
-
- 'We closed the roads and mountain passes that
- might serve as ways of escape for the Turks
- and then proceeded in the work of extermination.'
- (Ohanus Appressian)
- 'In Soviet Armenia today there no longer exists
- a single Turkish soul.' (Sahak Melkonian)
-
-
-