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WASHINGTON, DC - Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) added his voice to those
raised by Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-chairs Joe Knollenberg
(R-MI) and Frank Pallone (D-NJ), today, in calling on the Azerbaijani
Government to end the destruction of centuries-old Armenian stone
crosses (khatchkars) in the historic Djulfa cemetery, located in southern
Nakhichevan.
In a strongly worded letter to Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev,
Rep. Schiff condemned "in the strongest terms" the Azerbaijani
action, calling the acts of desecration "offensive, violative
of international treaty obligations." He added that this destructive
behavior "further inflame[s] the relationship between your
country and the Republic of Armenia." The letter went on to
note that, "By permitting, indeed by promoting these acts,
the Republic of Azerbaijan dishonors not only the dead interred
at the cemetery, but Azerbaijan and the Azeri people as well."
Rep. Schiff's letter follows a call from Congressional Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg and Frank Pallone, last week, to
"halt the ongoing vandalism in Julfa's Old Cemetery immediately."
In a December 22nd letter to Azerbaijani Ambassador to the U.S.
Hafez Pashayev, Reps. Knollenberg and Pallone went on to "urge
the preparation and presentation of a documented report on the damage
caused to the architectural ensemble as a result of the latest violence,
to lead to a measures in remedy of the situation."
"We want to thank the Co-Chairs of the Armenian Caucus, Frank
Pallone and Joe Knollenberg, and Representative Adam Schiff for
raising Congressional concerns directly with the Azerbaijani government
over the desecration of the Djulfa cemetery - an important world
heritage site of tremendous religious and cultural significance,"
said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. "As Americans,
we look to our Ambassador to personally visit the site of this destruction
and to report back on the steps that our government is taking to
address this attack on our common heritage."
Thousands of Armenian Americans have already protested the destruction
of the Djulfa khatchkars, as part of an ANCA WebFax campaign to
Secretary Condoleezza Rice, urging the State Department to take
immediate action and send the U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan to the
region to assess the situation. This latest wave of attacks on these
Armenian monuments was documented on video. This footage clearly
shows Azerbaijani soldiers hammering and breaking up the khatchkars
and loading them on military trucks for transport. The video may
be viewed at: http://www.hairenik.com/Haireniktv/HA_TV_Clip04.htm
The historic Armenian cemetery in Djulfa includes khatchkars from
as far back as the 7th century and is revered as an architectural
treasure. International concerns were raised in 2002, when hundreds
of the khatchkars were destroyed in a similar manner by Azerbaijan.
Naikichevan is a historic part of the Armenian homeland and was
an integral part of the first Armenian Republic of 1918-1920. It
was arbitrarily severed from Armenia and placed under Azerbaijani
rule as part of the Soviet Union's accommodation with Kemalist Turkey
and Moscow's "divide and conquer" gerrymandering of borders
to facilitate its control of the region. During the Soviet era,
the indigenous Armenian population was pushed out of Nakhichevan
due to discrimination, economic pressure, and other policies advanced
by the Soviet Azerbaijani authorities.
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