ArmInfo. The events recorded in February 1992 in Azerbaijan as a massacre of its own people for domestic political purposes were later presented as genocide committed against Azerbaijan. This was written on his Facebook page by Tigran Abrahamyan, a member of the Armenian parliament from the opposition faction With Honor, touching upon the infamous events in Khojaly (Ivanyan).
The deputy recalled that 33 years ago on this day, internal political clashes in Azerbaijan reached their peak, and the forces that entered the struggle for power with the aim of removing then-President Ayaz Mutalibov from office committed a brutal massacre against their own people.
"This was the stage when the Artsakh self-defense forces gradually stopped attacks and rocket attacks on the capital Stepanakert and surrounding villages, and one of the operations was carried out in the direction of the settlement of Ivanyan (former Khojaly). The Azerbaijanis turned the settlement into a firing position, using the Meskhetian Turks who had been resettled there in advance as shields," Abrahamyan noted. According to him, 2-3 days before the operation, the Armenians not only announced it through loudspeakers, but also informed the civilian population about the corridor along which the civilian population was to leave through the valley of the Karkar River to Aghdam, which was controlled by the Azerbaijanis.
"However, according to the Azerbaijanis, at the instigation of the Popular Front fighting for power, part of the civilian population was never evacuated from Khojaly, part was sent in the wrong direction, and part of the civilians who reached Aghdam along the corridor were shot by Azerbaijani militants in order to facilitate the process of changing power in Azerbaijan, which subsequently happened.
I repeat: that part of the village of Aghdam, where atrocities against their own people took place, was completely under the control of the Azerbaijani forces," the oppositionist noted.
At the same time, he noted that, by a strange coincidence, the eyewitnesses who spoke about the atrocities and reprisals committed by the Azerbaijanis against their own people, the cameraman who filmed them, and the editor of "Monitor", who published this in his newspaper, were subsequently killed by unknown persons, and those who spoke about this publicly were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment, in other words, an attempt was made to cover up the tracks.
"Later, in order to edit their own history and its shameful page, the Azerbaijani authorities tried to attribute this to the Artsakh self-defense forces, but what happened had already been recorded and turned into documentary materials not only by Azerbaijanis (many of whom were subsequently physically destroyed), but also by foreign media and journalists. Regardless of how silently and weakly the current Armenian government demonstrates the facts of mass killings and forced deportations of Armenians in Sumgait, Baku, Kirovabad and Maragha, the war crimes of Azerbaijan, including against its own people, are also internationally recognized facts," the MP concluded.
Independent Azerbaijani television journalist and cameraman Chingiz Mustafayev, who filmed on February 28 and March 2, 1992, doubted the official Azerbaijani version and began his own investigation into the events in Khojaly. The journalist's very first message to the Moscow agency "DR-press" about the possible involvement of the Azerbaijani side in the crimes cost Mustafayev his life: he was killed near Akna (Agdam), under circumstances that are still unclear. Talking about the flight to Ivanyan (Khojaly), he noted that he was unable to film the corpses in Ivanyan (Khojaly), because "there were no trace of the dead there at all:"
During the first flight, journalists filmed only a couple dozen corpses of Azerbaijani soldiers found near the village of Nakhichevanik
During the second flight to the area of the mass murder of people, already on March 2, 1992, journalists noticed that the position of the bodies on the ground and the degree of damage and injuries, compared to the first inspection, had changed dramatically. Chingiz Mustafayev informed President Mutalibov that the position of the bodies and the damage to the corpses did not match the initial inspection, who by that time had already guessed the reasons for the tragedy.
Mutalibov replied: "Chingiz, do not tell anyone a word about what you have noticed. Otherwise, you will be killed."
Chingiz Mustafayev was killed in the same field where he was filming the main Azerbaijani "argument".