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    5 Kommentare

    1. More_Ad_5142 on

      Yes as a Turk, I fully agree. Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity must be fully respected, but so is the right of return of the Armenians who fled

    2. Civil-Agent-7382 on

      They do and the fact the current government does nothing to advocate for this issue is appalling.

      But id rather have them be safe in Armenia, than discriminated against or dead in Azerbaijan.

      As soon as its PRACTICAL to do so, perhaps when Azerbaijans oil runs out in a decade per economists estimates, we need to retake Artsakh by force. That doesn’t mean we need to speak about it, that would be very unpractical and counter productive. But we need to take real practical steps (ie, arming ourselves) to work towards this in the future.

      P.S. most people living in Glendale, including myself, are Armenian citizens and have just as much of a right to vote as you do. Hence the protest.

    3. ProbstWyatt3 on

      Not only refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh, but refugees from Nakhchivan, Western Armenia (Six Vilayets), and non-Armenian regions of Caucasian Azerbaijan (including Baku and Sumgait), Cilicia, and Istanbul! Rights to return is a fundamental right for humanity!

    4. My wife is from Baku and of mixed jewish-armenian descent. Her family moved from Baku in 1987 to RSFSR, but both grandparents families had to run a little later. Armenians ran earlier to Armenia and lived in Zod, Jewish family part moved to Israel. They’ve been to Baku about 5 years ago, both homes is squatted by Azerbaijanis, they haven’t got any money and not even we’re sorry. So I highly doubt that new wave of exiles would return or get anything for Aliev.

    5. i-hate-birch-trees on

      I’ve said this before, and I’ll keep saying this – the problem is the AZ regime. If it was a democratic country with actual institutions and protections for minorities, nobody would give a damn how the borders are drawn. This is how Europe stopped its endless wars – they made it so any group of Europeans feels safe in any European country and crossing borders is seamless. This is where our entire region is headed too, and I think that’s the future, eventually.

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