|
DECREE
OF THE PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF AZERBAIJAN
ON THE
GENOCIDE OF THE AZERBAIJANI PEOPLE
The
achievement of independence by the Azerbaijan Republic has made it possible
to reconstruct an objective picture of the historical past of our people.
Truths that were kept secret for long years and that were suppressed and
banned are coming to light, and the reality behind facts that were once
falsified is being revealed. The genocide that was repeatedly carried
out against the Azerbaijani people, and which for a long time was not
the subject of a proper political or legal assessment, is one of those
unrevealed pages of history.
With
the signing in 1813 and 1828 of the Gulistan and Turkmenchai Treaties,
there began the dismemberment of the Azerbaijani nation and the division
of our historical lands. The occupation of its lands marked the continuation
of the national tragedy of the divided Azerbaijani people. As a result
of this policy, within a very short time there took place a massive resettlement
of Armenians on Azerbaijani lands. A policy of genocide was to become
an essential element in that occupation of Azerbaijani territory.
Despite
the fact that the Armenians who had settled on the territories of the
Irevan, Nakhchivan and Karabakh khanates constituted a minority in comparison
with the Azerbaijanis living there, they succeeded, under the protection
of their patrons, in creating an administrative territorial unit in the
form of the so-called "Armenian Region". In essence, as a result of this
artificial territorial division the preconditions were created for a policy
of expelling Azerbaijanis from their own lands and for destroying the
Azerbaijani population. The propagandizing of the notion of a "Greater
Armenia" began. In order to "justify" the efforts to establish this fictitious
state on Azerbaijan land, large-scale programs were carried out aimed
at inventing a false history of the Armenian people. The distortion of
the history of Azerbaijan and of the Caucasus as a whole became an important
component of those programs.
From
1905 to 1907, inspired by illusions of creating a "Greater Armenia", the
Armenian invaders, without taking the trouble to hide their intentions,
carried out a number of large-scale and bloody actions against the Azerbaijanis.
The atrocities perpetrated by the Armenians, which began in Baku, were
ultimately extended to cover all of Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani villages
located on the territory of present-day Armenia. Hundreds of communities
were destroyed and wiped from the face of the earth, and thousands of
Azerbaijanis were barbarously murdered. The organizers of these events,
by preventing the disclosure of the truth of what had taken place and
by blocking its proper political and legal examination, cultivated a negative
image of the Azerbaijanis as a screen for their adventurist territorial
claims.
Capitalizing
for their own purposes on the situation that arose after the First World
War and following the uprisings in Russia in February and October of 1917,
the Armenians began to seek to turn their plans into reality under the
banner of Bolshevism. Beginning in March 1918, the Baku commune, under
the slogan of combating counter-revolutionary elements, set about putting
into practice a criminal plan whose objective was the liquidation of the
Azerbaijanis throughout Baku Province. The crimes committed by the Armenians
in those days have remained indelibly imprinted on the memory of the Azerbaijani
people. Thousands of peaceful Azerbaijanis were killed solely because
of their national affiliation. The Armenians set fire to their houses,
burning alive the men and women inside them. They destroyed national architectural
treasures, schools, hospitals, mosques and other buildings, laying waste
to a large part of Baku. The genocide of the Azerbaijanis was pursued
with particular ferocity in the districts of Baku, Shamakhy and Guba and
in Karabakh, Zangezur, Nakhchivan, Lenkoran and other regions of Azerbaijan.
On these lands the peaceful population was annihilated en masse, with
villages put to the torch and national monuments of culture ruined and
destroyed.
The
March events of 1918 became the focus of attention following the proclamation
of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. On 15 July 1918 the Council of
Ministers, for the purpose of investigating this tragedy, adopted a decree
establishing an extraordinary commission of inquiry. The Commission investigated
the March tragedy, focusing primarily on the atrocities committed by the
Armenians in Shamakhy as well as on their other heinous crimes in Irevan
Province. A special service was established within the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs for the purpose of informing the public at large about what had
actually happened. In 1919 and 1920 the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic
observed 31 March as a national day of mourning. In essence, this was
the first attempt at a political assessment of the policy of genocide
perpetrated against the Azerbaijanis and of the more than one-century-old
occupation of our lands. However, the demise of the Azerbaijan Democratic
Republic made it impossible to complete this work.
In
1920 the Armenians, taking advantage of the sovietization of the Transcaucasus
for their own vile purposes, proclaimed Zangezur and a number of lands
within Azerbaijan as territory of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic.
Subsequently, with a view to extending further the policy of deporting
Azerbaijanis from those territories, new means began to be used. As one
of them, the Armenians pushed through the adoption of a special decree
of the Council of Ministers of the USSR of 23 December 1947 "On the resettlement
of collective-farm workers and other members of the Azerbaijani population
from the Armenian SSR to the Kura-Araks Lowland of the Azerbaijan SSR"
and succeeded in bringing about, as a State-endorsed measure, the deportation
en masse of Azerbaijanis from their historical lands during the period
from 1948 to 1953.
Beginning
in the 1950s, Armenian nationalists, with the help of their patrons, initiated
a flagrant campaign of intellectual aggression against the Azerbaijani
people. In books, magazines and newspapers periodically circulated in
the former Soviet State they argued that the most outstanding works of
art of our national culture, our classical heritage and our architectural
monuments were all the creation of the Armenian people. This was accompanied
by a stepped-up effort to forge worldwide a negative perception of Azerbaijanis.
By creating an image of the "unfortunate, hapless Armenian people", those
engaged in this effort consciously falsified the events that had taken
place in the region at the beginning of the century: the very people who
had committed genocide against the Azerbaijanis were portrayed as the
victims of genocide.
Our
countrymen were subject to persecution and expelled in droves from the
city of Irevan, where the majority of the population at the beginning
of the century had been Azerbaijani, and from other regions of the Armenian
SSR. The Armenians shamelessly flouted the rights of the Azerbaijanis,
created obstacles to their receiving education in their native language,
and conducted a policy of repression. The historical names of Azerbaijani
villages were changed and a process, unprecedented in the history of toponymy,
of substituting modern for ancient place names was implemented. With the
aim of creating a basis for the education of Armenian youth in a spirit
of chauvinism, this imaginary Armenian history was elevated to the level
of State policy. Our younger generation, educated in the spirit of the
great humanitarian ideals of Azerbaijani literature and culture, found
themselves the target of persecution in the form of an extremist Armenian
ideology.
As
the ideological basis for political and military aggression, a policy
of slanderous defamation was directed against the spiritual values, national
honor and dignity of the Azerbaijani people. The Armenians used the Soviet
press to distort historical facts, thereby misleading public opinion.
The
leadership of the Azerbaijan Republic failed to come up with a timely
and proper assessment of the anti-Azerbaijani propaganda campaign which
was being waged by the Armenians, using the possibilities afforded by
the Soviet regime, and which, beginning in the mid-1980s, became more
and more intensive.
Officials
in the Republic also failed to deliver a correct political assessment
of the expulsion, at the initial stage of the so-called Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict that arose in 1988, of hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis
from their ancestral lands. The Armenians' unconstitutional decree on
the inclusion of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region of Azerbaijan
within the Armenian SSR, and what amounted in effect to the removal of
this region from Azerbaijani authority by means of the Moscow-installed
Committee for Special Administration, was greeted by our people with indignation,
and they found themselves confronted with the need to undertake serious
political action. Despite the fact that the policy of seizing our land
was resolutely condemned at meetings held at that time throughout the
Republic, the Azerbaijani leadership did not abandon its position of passivity.
It was in fact as a result of this failed response that troops were brought
into Baku in January 1990 for the purpose of putting down a popular movement
that was constantly growing in strength. In the events that followed,
hundreds of Azerbaijanis were killed, wounded or maimed, and others were
subjected to various forms of physical duress.
In
February 1992 the Armenians perpetrated an unheard-of punitive crime against
the population of the town of Khojaly. This bloody tragedy, which has
entered our history as the Khojaly Genocide, ended with the annihilation
of thousands of Azerbaijanis, with others taken prisoner and the city
erased from the face of the earth.
As
a result of the adventurist policy unleashed by the Armenian national-separatists
in Nagorno-Karabakh, today more than a million of our citizens have been
expelled by the Armenian aggressors from their places of birth and have
been forced to live in tent settlements. Thousands of our fellow-citizens
died or were made invalids at the time of the occupation by Armenian armed
forces of 20 per cent of our territory.
All
the tragedies that have befallen Azerbaijan in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries, accompanied by the seizure of our land, have been different
stages of a conscious policy of genocide systematically applied by the
Armenians against the Azerbaijani people. In the case of only one of these
events - the March massacre of 1918 - has an attempt been made to assess
what took place in political terms. The Azerbaijan Republic regards it
as a historical imperative that these events of genocide should be assessed
from a political perspective and that the decisions that the Azerbaijan
Democratic Republic was unable to fully implement should be brought to
their logical conclusion.
In
commemoration of these tragedies of genocide perpetrated against the Azerbaijani
people, I decree:
1.
That the date 31 March shall be proclaimed Day of Genocide of the Azerbaijanis;
2.
That it shall be recommended to the Milli Majlis (Parliament) of the Azerbaijan
Republic that it should consider holding a special session devoted to
the events connected with the genocide of the Azerbaijanis.
Heydar
Aliyev
President of the Republic of Azerbaijan
Baku, March 26, 1998
|
 |