 The Florida Turkish Center in Fort Lauderdale
The Florida Turkish Center in Fort Lauderdale on Saturday evening, March 1, 2014
 commemorated the cruel Armenian genocide of innocent Azerbaijan civilians at Khojaly..
Following
 an introduction by Mrs Tohfa Eminova,  President of the Florida 
Azerbaijan Association, Mr Samir Bejanov, Political Officer of the 
Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan  in Washington DC, provided the 
audience with a comprehensive report illustrated with slides and a video
 presentation of the actual sequence of events surrounding the Khojaly 
genocide. 
|  | 
| Mrs. Tohfa Eminova - (photo MB) | 
On February 25-26, 1992, Armenian occupation forces together with the
 366th infantry regiment of Soviet troops stationed in Khankendi 
committed an act of genocide against the population of the Azerbaijani 
town of Khojaly.
Some 613 people were killed, 487 people were injured. Some 1275 
residents were taken hostages. Most of them did not return from 
captivity. Their fate still remains unknown.
The Khojaly genocide is considered a crime not only against Azerbaijani people, but
 also against humanity, since it is fully consistent with the Convention
 on Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted on 
December 9, 1948.
According to this Convention, any crime against people based on their 
ethnicity is called genocide. And in Khojaly people were killed just 
because they were Azerbaijanis.
|  | 
| Mr. Samir Bejanov (photo MB) | 
Following the establishment of the 
Soviet rule in Armenia in late 1920, the Armenians were presented with a
 real opportunity to fulfill their age-old dream of creating an Armenian
 State on the territories of other nations. 
During the 70-years of Soviet 
rule, the Armenians succeeded in expanding their territory at the 
expense of Azerbaijan and using every possible means to expel the 
Azerbaijanis from their lands. 
Also during this period, the policy  to expel the 
Azerbaijanis from their lands was implemented systematically and methodically. 
In
 1920 
the Armenians declared Zangezur and a number of other Azerbaijani lands 
to be part of the territory of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic. 
In 1923 they managed to secure the status of an autonomous province for
 the mountainous part of Karabakh within Azerbaijan. Consequently this 
created an artificial entity within the territory of Azerbaijan, while 
the 
Azerbaijani population living in the territory of Armenia at that time 
were not given similar rights. 
The
 current stage of the conflict 
between Armenia and Azerbaijan may be regarded as having formally begun 
on 20 February 1988, when the Soviet of the People’s Deputies of the 
Nagorny Karabakh Autonomous Province adopted a decision to petition the 
Supreme Soviets of the Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR for the 
transfer of the province from the former to the latter.
|  | 
| Florida Turkish American Association members (photo MB) | 
Before the adoption of this decision, basically at the end of 1987, the Azerbaijanis became subject of 
attacks in Khankendi (during the Soviet/Russian  period ) and this
resulted in a flood of Azerbaijani refugees and internally 
displaced persons.
On 22 February 1988 near the settlement 
of Askeran on the Khankendi-Aghdam highway, the Armenians opened fire on
 a peaceful demonstration by the Azerbaijanis protesting against the 
above-mentioned decision of the Soviet People’s Deputies of the 
Nagorny Karabakh Autonomous Province. As a consequence two Azerbaijani youths lost their 
lives, becoming the first victims of the conflict.
In 1991 central law-enforcement agencies
 of the then USSR apprehended dozens of the Armenian armed groups that 
operated outside Nagorny Karabakh. As a result, the Chaykend village of the 
Khanlar district of Azerbaijan was turned by the Armenian armed groups 
into a criminal hub from which they bombed and shelled surrounding 
villages and roads, terrorizing the local Azerbaijani population. From 
1989 to 1991, in Chaykend and adjacent areas 54 people fell victim 
to the Armenian armed groups. In 1992 Azerbaijan regained its control 
over the Goranboy district.
At
 the end of 1991 and the beginning of 
1992 the conflict turned into a military phase. Taking advantage of the 
political instability as a result of the dissolution of the Soviet Union
 and internal squabbles in Azerbaijan, Armenia initiated by giving 
external military assistance to combat operations in Nagorny Karabakh.
In February 1992, an unprecedented 
massacre was committed against the Azerbaijani population in the town of
 Khojaly. This bloody tragedy, which became known as the Khojaly 
genocide, involved the extermination or capture of thousands of 
Azerbaijanis as their town was razed to the ground.
During that fatal night of 25 
to 26 February 1992 the Armenian armed forces, with the help of the 
infantry guards regiment No. 366 from the former USSR implemented the 
seizure of Khojaly - a small town situated in the small Nagorny Karabakh 
region of the Republic of Azerbaijan with a population  of 23,757, and cruelly decimated them. 
The
 large number of question from the audience during the question and 
answer period, following Mr. Bejanov's presentation, showed how much 
much the talk had impressed the audience.  
Given
 the present invasion of Russian troops into the Crimea area of Ukraine,
 the Fort Lauderdale Turkish Center presentation also provided  an 
actual insight as to Russian historical political strategies concerning 
their former territories. and spheres of influence     
The informative event  at the Florida Turkish Center in Fort Lauderdale was concluded with Azerbaijan food and refreshments.
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