More than 25,000 observers have been registered in Azerbaijan to observe the upcoming early presidential elections on February 7. The registration of observers will last until January 28. Although most of the registered observers are reportedly local, some structures that distinguished themselves in previous elections by their critical reports are…
Day: January 21, 2024
NPR News: 01-21-2024 4AM EST
The memory of the January 20 martyrs has been honored with a minute of silence in Azerbaijan’s Khankendi city for the first time in 34 years, according to Azerbaijan in Focus, reporting Trend.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan released the respective footage.
At 12:00 (GMT +4), in the city of Khankendi, as well as throughout Azerbaijan, a minute of silence was observed in memory of the martyrs of January 20.
On the night of January 19-20, 1990, as a result of military aggression of the units of the Soviet Army and special forces, as well as contingents of internal troops against Azerbaijan, civilians, including children, women and the elderly were massacred in the cities of Baku, Sumgayit, Lankaran and Neftchala by order of the USSR leadership.
As a result of the occupying forces’ military aggression 149 civilians were killed, 744 were seriously injured, and 4 people went missing. The Soviet army was sent to the country in order to forcefully suppress the mass protests of the Azerbaijani people and the national independence movement started in response to the discrimination policy of the USSR leadership against the people of Azerbaijan, the deportation of hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis from their historical lands in the territory of present-day Armenia, and Armenia’s unfounded territorial claims against Karabakh, committed an unprecedented massacre against the civilian population grossly violating international law and the Constitution.
The post Azerbaijan’s Khankendi honors memory of January 20 martyrs for first time in 34 years appeared first on Azerbaijan In Focus.

