As the last Karabakh PoWs are released from captivity in Azerbaijan, tales of
their ordeal in a Baku jail are sending shockwaves through Armenian society
By Eldar Zeynalov
Officially, the notorious Block Five of Baku's Bailov Prison has surrendered
its last secrets. It was here that Armenian prisoners-of-war captured during
the Nagorny Karabakh conflict sat on death row.
Even now, after the last inmates have been handed back to the Yerevan
authorities, many Armenians believe that hundreds more remain in captivity.
And, while the interior ministry in Baku refuses to hand over prison archives,
the true story of Block Five may never fully be known.
Throughout the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, Azerbaijan never recognised the rebel
army as a legitimate military force. Armenians captured during the fighting
were charged with murder, sabotage and terrorism, then sentenced in accordance
with the law. Public opinion often had a marked influence on the verdicts.
In March 1992, for example, a group of Armenian fighters from the Shushin
region were found guilty of ambushing an Azerbaijani army vehicle and sentenced
to death. The court case sparked a wave of public outrage after it was discovered
that one of their victims was the young journalist, Salatyn Askerova.
"We didn't know there was a woman in the military car," one of the
men said later from his cell in Block Five. "We just wanted to settle
scores with the soldiers who kept getting drunk and firing at our
village."
After the sentence was passed, these men simply disappeared. The authorities
claimed they were still alive and would be exchanged for Azerbaijani
prisoners-of-war but they were denied access to Red Cross workers, human rights
activists or journalists. Their whereabouts remain a mystery.
Former prisoners have, however, been able to throw some light on the fate of
Yuri Dzhangiryan, a leader of Armenia's notorious Krunk underground society,
who was brought back to Block Five after a failed prisoner exchange in the
Agdam region.
In June 1992, according to cellmates, Dzhangiryan, nicknamed "The
Marshal", was dragged out of his prison cell and severely beaten by prison
guards. The beating ruptured his liver and the Karabakh "freedom
fighter" died on the following day.
Repatriated Armenians have reported dozens of similar cases with prisoners
dying from illness and malnutrition as well as harsh treatment.
Executions were carried out with similar brutality. In February 1993, two
brothers fought desperately with guards sent to take them to the execution
yard. They clung fiercely to their beds and resisted any attempt to drag them
into the corridor. Eventually, the warders shot them through the bars of their
cell window and the narrow hatch in the door.
It was not until the end of 1993 that foreign observers from the International
Committee of the Red Cross were first allowed to visit death row prisoners.
However, on this occasion, the Armenian inmates were taken from their crowded
cells to Block Six, the children's wing, where conditions were comparatively
luxurious and each prisoner had his own bed.
Two months later, following the sensational escape of several death row
prisoners from the Bailov Prison, the Armenians were sent back to Block Five
where between five and seven men were crammed into cells designed for two.
Often their neighbours were Azerbaijani convicts who subjected the Armenians to
daily humiliation. A notorious example was Asim Shemakhinsky whose
brother had been executed during the Soviet era and was now awaiting a similar
fate. One prisoner reportedly hanged himself as a result of Shemakhinsky's
brutality whilst another, a Russian, died from the constant physical abuse.
One Karabakh fighter, Vasily Lugovoy, was the victim of constant hazing until he
persuaded the authorities to move him to a different cell where two Armenians
had recently died. Lugovoy's death sentence was later commuted to 15 years'
imprisonment.
Another former inmate of Block Five remembers, "I wasn't afraid of death,
it had been hanging over me for too long. But five or six years are enough to
make you hate everyone, sometimes without exception. It was a hell of struggle
to stay human there, in that continually humiliating atmosphere where sometimes
you were insulted verbally, sometimes with sticks and boots."
But, amid the despair, there were tales of hope and self-sacrifice. Several
Armenians recall receiving food packages from an Azerbaijani they knew only as
Firuddin. The packages were accompanied by a note which said that, although
they had come to Bailov by different paths, their "brand of suffering was
the same". Firuddin died in 1995 and his face was reportedly disfigured by
prison wardens attempting to tear out his gold teeth.
Following the Red Cross visits, the Armenians began to receive food parcels
from abroad - luxuries which they shared with their fellow inmates. A doctor
also made regular visits - although the prisoners were shocked to discover he
was a cousin of the murdered journalist Askerova. This fact, apparently, did
not affect his dedication to duty.
The first Armenians were released from Bailov in May 1996, charged with appeals
from other inmates to tell the world of the suffering in Block Five. However,
convinced they were under surveillance by the secret services, the former
convicts waited another four years before breaking their silence.
Even now, the Azerbaijani interior ministry is refusing to hand over the Bailov
Prison archives and the prisoners' stories remain the only testimonies to the
fate of their missing comrades.
Eldar Zeynalov is the director of the Human Rights Centre in Baku
IWPR, 11 Aug 00
CRS Issue 44
https://goo.gl/fypuvM
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