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Azeri Soldier ‘Surrenders’ at Armenia Border

by Contributor
July 26, 2012
in Armenia, Featured Story, Latest, News, Top Stories
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The Azeri APA news agency released a photo of Firuz Farajov

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—An Azerbaijani army soldier was captured by Armenian troops after crossing into Armenia in unclear circumstances early on Thursday.

The Armenian Defense Ministry said the 20-year-old conscript, Firuz Farajov, surrendered to its forces guarding a western section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. “The border violator was arrested and an investigation is underway,” the ministry said in a statement.

The statement added that the Yerevan office of the International Committee of the Red Cross has been informed about the incident.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry confirmed Farajov’s capture. According to 1news.az, the ministry said the soldier was taken prisoner after he “got lost” near Azerbaijani army positions in the western Tovuz district bordering Tavush province in northeastern Armenia.

An Azerbaijani sergeant, Mammadbagir Akhundzade, was captured there by Karabakh Armenian forces last January after allegedly deserting his army unit deployed northeast of the disputed territory. According to the Armenian military, he was freed and deported to an unspecified “third country” last month.

Akhundzade was not the first Azerbaijani prisoner of war who apparently chose not to return to his homeland for fear of prosecution. Azerbaijani soldiers returning from Armenian captivity are known to have been routinely prosecuted and given lengthy prison sentences on charges of high treason.

Earlier this year, Azerbaijan likewise deported three Armenian POWs to an unknown country. According to the military authorities in Baku, they surrendered to Azerbaijani forces in February 2009.

Contributor

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Comments 1

  1. www.Voskanapat.info says:
    10 years ago

    Not sure why this website continues to spread anti-Armenian lies and propaganda distributed by a well-known Azeri-Turk trash bin called RFE/RL…

    Firuz Farajov escaped Azeri-Turk army and like many other soldiers will most likely be given an asylum in EU. Most of these soldiers are representatives of local ethnic non-Turkic minorities native to the lands occupied by the artificial Azeri-Turk regime. They are sent to fight with Armenians in disproportionate numbers and their deaths on the border benefit Azeri-Turk occupants because they kill two birds with one stone – sending non-Turks to fight with Armenians thus getting rid of the remaining ethnic minorities. Sultan Aliyev’s regime has recently formed special Azeri-Turk units on the border to kill their own soldiers who attempt to escape into Armenia or Artsakh.

    This particular regiment where he served had severe losses in the past few months and naturally, non-Azeri soldiers do not want to die for the Great Turan cause.

    Reply

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