In the 1920s, whenever circumstances related to border issues
were unfavorable or not to their liking, the Azerbaijani authorities constantly
provoked tensions on the ground, causing violations of the rights of border
residents of Soviet Armenia and thus creating obstacles for border commissions.
For example, by a resolution of the Central Executive Committee
of the Transcaucasian Federation, on February 18, 1929, the work of the
commission on the administrative borders of the former Jabrayil of the
Azerbaijani SSR, Zangezur of the Armenian SSR, and the Meghri provinces of the
Armenian SSR was resumed on June 27, 1929.
Immediately after the start of the work, the representatives of
Ghubatlu Forestry and Zangelan Regional Executive Committee constantly
interfered, despite established criminal liability for such meddling.
At their instigation, there was an attack on a land marker with
border signs, and a resistance was organized, as a result of which the work was
stopped on August 12, 1929.
To that end, Aziz Kuliev, a representative of the Ghubatlu
forestry, urged the local Muslim population to send complaints to Tbilissi
(Georgia), and Basim Khalilov, a spokesman for the Zangelan regional executive
committee, threatened non-Christian villagers supporting the demarcation work
on location, accusing them of "taking bribes from Armenians."
Even back then, the Azerbaijani authorities were inciting hatred
and enmity among the civilians, and were doing so by extensively using ethnic
propaganda.
We must learn lessons from the past, and we must disallow
violations of the rights of the border residents of the Republic of Armenia.