[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 34 (Friday, February 27, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1197-S1198]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THE VICTIMS OF THE SUMGAIT POGROMS
Mr. PETERS. Madam President, I wish to recognize the victims of the
mass murder of Armenians 27 years ago during the state-sponsored
pogroms in Sumgait, Azerbaijan.
The citizens of Nagorno Karabakh peacefully petitioned to be reunited
with Soviet Armenia and spoke out against the arbitrary borders
established by Joseph Stalin and the Soviet Union. This democratic
exercise of free speech expressing a natural desire for self-
determination was met with 3 days of violence and brutality against
Armenian civilians, who were hunted down in their homes. Security
forces in Soviet Azerbaijan turned a blind eye, allowing the mass
murder of Armenians in a futile attempt to defeat this movement. The
massacres of Armenians did not stop in Sumgait but were followed in
other Azerbaijani towns such as Kirovabad in November 1988 and the
capital Baku in January 1990. The U.S. Congress strongly condemned
these massacres at that time. Hundreds of thousands of Armenians fled
Azerbaijan, many finding their home in my State of Michigan, where
there is a monument to the victims of the Sumgait massacres.
True democracies must respect the rights of the minority, allow
citizens to peacefully speak freely, and protect the human rights of
all residents. The people of Nagorno Karabakh and the victims of this
senseless massacre played a critical role in promoting a democracy
movement which helped to end the Soviet Union.
Today, I remember the victims and ask my colleagues and the American
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people to join me in honoring their memories.
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