
ArmInfo. Konstantin Zatulin, Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on CIS Affairs, called Azerbaijan's reaction to his statements condemning the former leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh "an unimpressive insult" against the backdrop of "effectively suspended death sentences" for Armenian politicians. He stated this to RTVI.
As a reminder, on February 5, a Baku puppet court sentenced Arayik Harutyunyan, David Babayan, David Ishkhanyan, David Manukyan, and Levon Mnatsakanyan to life imprisonment on trumped-up charges, and Bako Sahakyan and Arkady Ghukasyan to 20 years in prison. The so-called court sentenced the remaining Artsakh residents to up to 15 years in prison. The verdict has not yet been announced for philanthropist Ruben Vardanyan, whose case has been separated into separate proceedings. On the same day, the international Lazarev Club issued a statement regarding the sentences handed down to Armenian prisoners held in Azerbaijan. The statement was published on the social media page of Lazarev Club Council Coordinator Konstantin Zatulin. The statement noted that the sentence handed down in Baku to the military-political leadership of Nagorno-Karabakh effectively condemned the right of the region's Armenian population to self-determination, which was demonstrated during the collapse of the USSR. It emphasized that the trial in Baku is a reprisal, a trial, not a court.
On February 6, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry delivered a note of protest to the Russian Ambassador to the Republic, Mikhail Yevdokimov.
Zatulin himself, speaking with RTVI, noted that he was unaware of the contents of the protest note. However, he cited a quote he claimed belonged to writer Mark Twain: "The most notorious thief does not want to see himself in a public gallery of swindlers."
"Why did I mention him? Because there's no comparison to Azerbaijan's actions when it comes to the captured leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh, who were demonstratively subjected to effectively suspended death sentences," the State Duma deputy told RTVI.
He noted that the former presidents of the abolished Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, 68-year-old Arkady Ghukasyan and 65-year-old Bako Ghukasyan, who were sentenced to 20 years in prison, "are unlikely to survive the remainder of their sentences." "And from this perspective, I'm not impressed by Azerbaijan's grievances over the statement by the Lazarev Club [a Russian-Armenian organization created at Zatulin's initiative in 2018 - RTVI note]," Zatulin stated.