Rahim Gaziyev: Difference between revisions

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(a) PACE defines it as separatist; (b) I don't see a point in changing spelling to American English - see Wikipedia:ENGVAR#Retaining_the_existing_variety
VartanM (talk | contribs)
(a) we're not in PACE see WP:NPOV, which is an official policy (b) see WP:OWN, which is another official policy (c) who the hell is Zhirokhov? see WP:RS (d) see talk, the proper place for discussion
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==Prior to the war==
==Prior to the war==
Gaziyev graduated from the [[Azerbaijan Architecture and Construction University]] and has a [[Kandidat nauk|Candidate of Sciences]] degree in Physics and Mathematics. From 1968 to 1990, he worked as an associate professor of mathematics at the same institution.<ref name="labyrinth">[http://www.labyrinth.ru/content/card.asp?cardid=27536 Rahim Gaziyev]. ''Labyrinth.ru''</ref> In 1988, he became one of the founders and first fifteen members of the sovereigntist [[Popular Front of Azerbaijan]]. He was known for his radical nationalist viewpoints<ref name="labyrinth"/> and vehement support of [[Abulfaz Elchibey]]. Gaziyev was arrested in the summer of 1990 as an organiser of the anti-Soviet riots leading to the [[Black January]] massacre, and was incarcerated in the [[Lefortovo prison]] in [[Moscow]]. He was freed upon being elected to the [[Supreme Soviet]] of Azerbaijan later that summer, although his criminal case was never closed.<ref name="alizadeh">[http://www.azeribook.com/politika/zardusht_alizade/konets_vtoroy_respubliki.htm End of the Second Republic] by Zardusht Alizadeh</ref> With the escalation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani military conflict in [[Nagorno-Karabakh]] and [[Shusha]] becoming one of the few remaining Azerbaijani strongholds in this separatist province, Gaziyev took command of the city's defence in January 1992.
Gaziyev graduated from the [[Azerbaijan Architecture and Construction University]] and has a [[Kandidat nauk|Candidate of Sciences]] degree in Physics and Mathematics. From 1968 to 1990, he worked as an associate professor of mathematics at the same institution.<ref name="labyrinth">[http://www.labyrinth.ru/content/card.asp?cardid=27536 Rahim Gaziyev]. ''Labyrinth.ru''</ref> In 1988, he became one of the founders and first fifteen members of the sovereigntist [[Popular Front of Azerbaijan]]. He was known for his radical nationalist viewpoints<ref name="labyrinth"/> and vehement support of [[Abulfaz Elchibey]]. Gaziyev was arrested in the summer of 1990 as an organiser of the anti-Soviet riots leading to the [[Black January]] massacre, and was incarcerated in the [[Lefortovo prison]] in [[Moscow]]. He was freed upon being elected to the [[Supreme Soviet]] of Azerbaijan later that summer, although his criminal case was never closed.<ref name="alizadeh">[http://www.azeribook.com/politika/zardusht_alizade/konets_vtoroy_respubliki.htm End of the Second Republic] by Zardusht Alizadeh</ref> With the escalation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani military conflict in [[Nagorno-Karabakh]] and [[Shusha]] becoming one of the few remaining Azerbaijani strongholds in the region, Gaziyev took command of the city's defence in January 1992.


==Office==
==Office==
After the resignation of President [[Ayaz Mutallibov]] on [[6 March]] [[1992]], no official body regulated Gaziyev's actions, which provoked him to break ceasefire on a number of occasions including artillery bombardment of Nagorno-Karabakh's capital city [[Stepanakert]].<ref name="de waal">[http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/russian/in_depth/newsid_4673000/4673953.stm The Black Garden] by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 11</ref> On [[17 March]] [[1992]], Acting President of Azerbaijan [[Yagub Mammadov]] appointed Gaziyev (who had no professional military training) Defence Minister.<ref name="de waal"/> Two months later, with various political groups chaotically struggling for power, both Shusha and [[Lachin]] (city in Azerbaijan-proper linking Nagorno-Karabakh to [[Armenia]]) lacked any serious or unified defence and quickly fell to Armenians<ref name="de waal"/>. In response, Gaziyev ordered troops to move to the north of the province. [[Mardakert]] was taken back in June 1992 and by August, Azerbaijani troops were already at Vank, 12 kilometres north of the province capital Stepanakert.<ref>[http://artofwar.ru/z/zhirohow_m_a/text_0100.shtml Aviation in Nagorno-Karabakh] by Mikhail Zhirokhov</ref><ref name="alizadeh"/> Contrary to his radical anti-Russian sentiment in the late 1980s, Gaziyev was now convinced in the necessity of partnership with [[Russia]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/russian/in_depth/newsid_4682000/4682089.stm The Black Garden] by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 13</ref> In November, Azerbaijanis were dislodged from most of Mardakert. After Armenians started advancing into [[Kalbajar]], the Popular Front which had been in power since June 1992 issued a statement in which it blamed Rahim Gaziyev and Elchibey's official representative in Nagorno-Karabakh [[Surat Huseynov]] for treason and intentional surrender of Shusha in an attempt to restore Mutallibov as President and indulge Russia's geopolitical interests. Gaziyev was forced to resign in February 1993.<ref name="alizadeh"/>
After the resignation of President [[Ayaz Mutallibov]] on [[6 March]] [[1992]], no official body regulated Gaziyev's actions, which provoked him to break ceasefire on a number of occasions including artillery bombardment of Nagorno-Karabakh's capital city [[Stepanakert]].<ref name="de waal">[http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/russian/in_depth/newsid_4673000/4673953.stm The Black Garden] by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 11</ref> On [[17 March]] [[1992]], Acting President of Azerbaijan [[Yagub Mammadov]] appointed Gaziyev (who had no professional military training) Defence Minister.<ref name="de waal"/> Two months later, with various political groups chaotically struggling for power, both Shusha and [[Lachin]] (city in Azerbaijan-proper linking Nagorno-Karabakh to [[Armenia]]) lacked any serious or unified defence and quickly fell to Armenians<ref name="de waal"/>. In response, Gaziyev ordered troops to move to the north of the province. [[Mardakert]] was taken back in June 1992 and by August, Azerbaijani troops were already at Vank, 12 kilometres north of the province capital Stepanakert.<ref>[http://artofwar.ru/z/zhirohow_m_a/text_0100.shtml Aviation in Nagorno-Karabakh] by Mikhail Zhirokhov</ref>{{dubious}}<ref name="alizadeh"/> Contrary to his radical anti-Russian sentiment in the late 1980s, Gaziyev was now convinced in the necessity of partnership with [[Russia]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/russian/in_depth/newsid_4682000/4682089.stm The Black Garden] by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 13</ref> In November, Azerbaijanis were dislodged from most of Mardakert. After Armenians started advancing into [[Kalbajar]], the Popular Front which had been in power since June 1992 issued a statement in which it blamed Rahim Gaziyev and Elchibey's official representative in Nagorno-Karabakh [[Surat Huseynov]] for treason and intentional surrender of Shusha in an attempt to restore Mutallibov as President and indulge Russia's geopolitical interests. Gaziyev was forced to resign in February 1993.<ref name="alizadeh"/>


After [[Heydar Aliyev]] came to power in June 1993, Gaziyev was elected to the [[National Assembly of Azerbaijan|National Assembly]] and was offered the position of Vice Premier for Defence Industry. However knowing that Azerbaijan at the time did not produce any defence materials which made the office of no significance (the industry was only established in 2005; see: [[Azerbaijan Defense Industry]]), infuriated Gaziyev verbally attacked Aliyev during the parliament session calling him a liar.<ref name="alizadeh"/> In an early 1996 interview, Gaziyev claimed having had a mutual agreement with Aliyev by which Gaziyev was to be appointed Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan upon Aliyev's rise to power but was wronged for the sake of the latter's [[regionalism (politics)|regionalist]] policies favouring natives of [[Nakhchivan]].<ref>[http://www.memo.ru/hr/hotpoints/karabah/nemcy/Chapter5.htm Azerbaijan: Trials, Investigations and Arrests]. ''Memo.ru''</ref>
After [[Heydar Aliyev]] came to power in June 1993, Gaziyev was elected to the [[National Assembly of Azerbaijan|National Assembly]] and was offered the position of Vice Premier for Defence Industry. However knowing that Azerbaijan at the time did not produce any defence materials which made the office of no significance (the industry was only established in 2005; see: [[Azerbaijan Defense Industry]]), infuriated Gaziyev verbally attacked Aliyev during the parliament session calling him a liar.<ref name="alizadeh"/> In an early 1996 interview, Gaziyev claimed having had a mutual agreement with Aliyev by which Gaziyev was to be appointed Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan upon Aliyev's rise to power but was wronged for the sake of the latter's [[regionalism (politics)|regionalist]] policies favouring natives of [[Nakhchivan]].<ref>[http://www.memo.ru/hr/hotpoints/karabah/nemcy/Chapter5.htm Azerbaijan: Trials, Investigations and Arrests]. ''Memo.ru''</ref>

Revision as of 08:34, 22 September 2008

Rahim Gaziyev
Minister of Defence of Azerbaijan
In office
17 March 1992 – February 1993
Prime MinisterHasan Hasanov
Firuz Mustafayev (acting)
Rahim Huseynov
Ali Masimov
Preceded byTahir Aliyev
Succeeded byDadash Rzayev
Personal details
Born1943
Shaki, Azerbaijan SSR, Soviet Union

Rahim Hasan oglu Gaziyev (Azeri: Rəhim Qazıyev) (born 1943, Shaki, Azerbaijan) was Azerbaijani Defence Minister in 19921993, in the turmoil of the Nagorno-Karabakh War, and later a political prisoner.

Prior to the war

Gaziyev graduated from the Azerbaijan Architecture and Construction University and has a Candidate of Sciences degree in Physics and Mathematics. From 1968 to 1990, he worked as an associate professor of mathematics at the same institution.[1] In 1988, he became one of the founders and first fifteen members of the sovereigntist Popular Front of Azerbaijan. He was known for his radical nationalist viewpoints[1] and vehement support of Abulfaz Elchibey. Gaziyev was arrested in the summer of 1990 as an organiser of the anti-Soviet riots leading to the Black January massacre, and was incarcerated in the Lefortovo prison in Moscow. He was freed upon being elected to the Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan later that summer, although his criminal case was never closed.[2] With the escalation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani military conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh and Shusha becoming one of the few remaining Azerbaijani strongholds in the region, Gaziyev took command of the city's defence in January 1992.

Office

After the resignation of President Ayaz Mutallibov on 6 March 1992, no official body regulated Gaziyev's actions, which provoked him to break ceasefire on a number of occasions including artillery bombardment of Nagorno-Karabakh's capital city Stepanakert.[3] On 17 March 1992, Acting President of Azerbaijan Yagub Mammadov appointed Gaziyev (who had no professional military training) Defence Minister.[3] Two months later, with various political groups chaotically struggling for power, both Shusha and Lachin (city in Azerbaijan-proper linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia) lacked any serious or unified defence and quickly fell to Armenians[3]. In response, Gaziyev ordered troops to move to the north of the province. Mardakert was taken back in June 1992 and by August, Azerbaijani troops were already at Vank, 12 kilometres north of the province capital Stepanakert.[4][dubious ][2] Contrary to his radical anti-Russian sentiment in the late 1980s, Gaziyev was now convinced in the necessity of partnership with Russia.[5] In November, Azerbaijanis were dislodged from most of Mardakert. After Armenians started advancing into Kalbajar, the Popular Front which had been in power since June 1992 issued a statement in which it blamed Rahim Gaziyev and Elchibey's official representative in Nagorno-Karabakh Surat Huseynov for treason and intentional surrender of Shusha in an attempt to restore Mutallibov as President and indulge Russia's geopolitical interests. Gaziyev was forced to resign in February 1993.[2]

After Heydar Aliyev came to power in June 1993, Gaziyev was elected to the National Assembly and was offered the position of Vice Premier for Defence Industry. However knowing that Azerbaijan at the time did not produce any defence materials which made the office of no significance (the industry was only established in 2005; see: Azerbaijan Defense Industry), infuriated Gaziyev verbally attacked Aliyev during the parliament session calling him a liar.[2] In an early 1996 interview, Gaziyev claimed having had a mutual agreement with Aliyev by which Gaziyev was to be appointed Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan upon Aliyev's rise to power but was wronged for the sake of the latter's regionalist policies favouring natives of Nakhchivan.[6]

Conviction and later pardon

Now confronting Aliyev's powerful figure Gaziyev was officially convicted of treason in surrendering Shusha to Armenians. He was detained in jail in August 1993 and was to be tried in court in November but managed to escape to Moscow, followed by Surat Huseynov. There he declared his full support of ex-President Ayaz Mutallibov who had been living in exile in Russia since summer of 1992 and ironically whom Gaziyev helped to have removed from power just two years earlier.[7] On 16 April 1996 Prosecutor General's Office of Russia decided that Gaziyev (already sentenced to death in absentia in his home country) be deported to Baku[8] where his sentence was replaced by life imprisonment in 1998.

At the insistence of PACE, Rahim Gaziyev was pardoned and released in March 2005.[9] After his release, Gaziyev published several articles in an attempt to rehabilitate himself in the public eye but was taken no interest in.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Rahim Gaziyev. Labyrinth.ru
  2. ^ a b c d e End of the Second Republic by Zardusht Alizadeh
  3. ^ a b c The Black Garden by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 11
  4. ^ Aviation in Nagorno-Karabakh by Mikhail Zhirokhov
  5. ^ The Black Garden by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 13
  6. ^ Azerbaijan: Trials, Investigations and Arrests. Memo.ru
  7. ^ The Black Garden by Thomas de Waal. Chapter 17
  8. ^ Mutallibov and Gaziyev Detained Again by Dmitri Makarov. Argumenty i fakty. 16 April 1996. Retrieved 19 September 2008
  9. ^ Political Prisoners Pardoned in Azerbaijan. BBC Russian. 21 March 2005. Retrieved 19 September 2008