EXCLUSIVE: A growing number of politicians want the Russian assets – frozen since the Ukraine invasion – to be sold, with the proceeds sent to Kyiv. But banks want to know whether it’s legal. https://t.co/p6rFlrdrtD
— Bloomberg (@business) February 24, 2024
Day: February 25, 2024
24.02.1973 – на ТВ впервые вышла передача «Очевидное—невероятное» с ее бессменным автором и ведущим С.П.Капицей. pic.twitter.com/L78ANSX7qv
— Исторические Фото (@HistoryFoto) February 24, 2024
Live update: Former PM Ehud Barak: Netanyahu will risk hostages’ lives if it makes him ‘look strong’ https://t.co/qRW12OpBkf
— ToI ALERTS (@TOIAlerts) February 25, 2024
“The price of political opposition has never been higher in modern Russia or the goal of change so remote” – @sarahrainsfordhttps://t.co/ysMNZJQKkx
— Dr. Dan Lomas (@Sandbagger_01) February 25, 2024
Lovely, but nothing says “solidarity” like long-range weapons! https://t.co/JeS8AgAyrS
— Garry Kasparov (@Kasparov63) February 25, 2024
EXCLUSIVE: A growing number of politicians want the Russian assets – frozen since the Ukraine invasion – to be sold, with the proceeds sent to Kyiv. But banks want to know whether it’s legal. https://t.co/p6rFlrdrtD
— Bloomberg (@business) February 24, 2024
NPR News: 02-25-2024 3AM EST
A new website www.khojalywitness.org has been launched in partnership with Leyla Aliyeva, initiator of the “Justice for Khojaly” international campaign, Vice-President of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation, and with the initiative of the famous photojournalist Reza Deghati, according to Azerbaijan in Focus, reporting AzerTac.
Reza Deghati, was one of those, who witnessed the Khojaly genocide and the horrors the people of Azerbaijan endured in 1992. He hosted exhibitions and made reportages in many parts of the world to bring the realities to the world community.
The website features photos made in Khojaly and Aghdam in 1992, and articles written by influential media outlets such as “The Times”, “The New York Times”, “The Washington Times”, “The Washington Post”, “ВВС 1 News”, “The Independent”, “Le Monde”, “Newsweek”, “The Sunday Times”, “Human Rights Watch”, “The Age”, “The Boston Globe”, “Kommersant” and “Svoboda”.
The website is available in Azerbaijani, French, English and Russian languages, allowing the wider audience to learn about the realities of the Khojaly genocide.
On the night of February 26, 1992, the Armenian armed forces committed a deliberate act of massacre in Khojaly, a small town in Karabakh, Azerbaijan. During that night 613 people were killed including 106 women, 63 children, and 70 elderly people. Most of them especially the women and children were shot at close range, scalped, burnt alive, had their eyes gorged out, or were beheaded, and one pregnant woman was bayoneted in the abdomen. Those who escaped the gunfire with wounds had to trek through the mountains to safety and many perished in the -10 ° C.
A further 1 275 people were taken prisoner some of the prisoners were shot dead. Those who survived fled to the city of Aghdam, they went to the mosque which was being used as a morgue to search for their loved ones who had disappeared. Each day they wandered among the dozens of corpses wrapped in body bags brought to Aghdam by the Red Cross. As they examined their faces, they discovered the horrors perpetrated by the Armenian soldiers.
The post New website highlighting Khojaly genocide launched appeared first on Azerbaijan In Focus.
