ArmInfo.Archeology is becoming a tool of political manipulation in the hands of Azerbaijan to justify genocide, ethnic cleansing and other atrocities. This is stated in an article written by Uri Rosenberg, a researcher from the Universities of Potsdam and Heidelberg, which was published in the prestigious Central Asian Survey journal, according to a new analysis by the Geghard Scientific and Analytical Foundation.
Specifically, the article emphasizes that the cave complexes located in the villages of Azokh and Mets Tagher in the Hadrut region of occupied Artsakh play an important propaganda role in Azerbaijan. "In recent years, the Azerbaijani government has been organizing regular tours for foreign travelers, journalists and others, choosing the Azokh cave as one of the stopping points. There, they are told about the "ancient human settlement on the territory of Azerbaijan" and "illegal excavations by Armenians," Rosenberg notes. As explained in the article by the Foundation, during excavations in the 1960s and 1970s in the Azokh cave, a prehistoric human jaw was discovered, which is of major archaeological significance for Artsakh.
According to some representatives of Azerbaijani historiography, the jaw belongs to the first Azerbaijani. At the same time, as noted by the Foundation, in addition to attempts to appropriate historical heritage, Azerbaijan also accuses Armenians of "illegal excavations." "In March 2021, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev visited the Azokh cave with his family and accused Armenian and foreign archaeologists of "illegal excavations," stating that "Armenians have damaged our historical heritage" and that from now on "only Azerbaijani scientists and their invited foreign colleagues will conduct research here," the article recalls.
Rosenberg also said that during his scientific work in the museum of the Azerbaijani city of Gobustan near Baku, to his great surprise he learned that the man who made the engraving in the cave 17 thousand years ago is considered Azerbaijani in Azerbaijan. "Azerbaijanis use the archaeological finds of Gobustan to prove their indigeniousness to the region and to claim that they are the original inhabitants of the area, including Nagorno-Karabakh, and that Armenians came here much later," Rosenberg notes.
In this regard, the Geghard Foundation also recalled the statement made by the director of the Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology of the National Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan, Farhad Guliyev, about the upcoming archaeological research in Artsakh. As mentioned by the Foundation, Guliyev stated that international archaeological expeditions will soon begin working in the occupied territories. In this regard, the Geghard Foundation noted that the emphasis on these directions of archaeological work reflect Azerbaijan's policy of rewriting history and creating a new past, the roots of stretch back to the Soviet period, the 1930s.