Body of another victim oilman died on December 4 is found
The analysis of the DNA of the body found on 21 February on the beach in the Neftchala region, showed that it was the body of Javid Khudaverdiev, an employee of the Transport Department of SOCAR, reads the information published on SOCAR website.
Khudaverdiev was one of the three oil workers, who were in a trailer on the platform N 501 in the field "Oil Rocks", who died on December 4 as a result of hurricane wind . The three oil men were considered missing. Subsequently, the body of one of them was found off the coast of Turkmenistan.
On the same day there was a fire on the platform N 10 on the "Guneshli" field. There were rescued 33 people. About 30 people were in the sea. Later the bodies of 13 died were found; 17 oil workers remain missing. -05D-
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The COP29 conference concluded in Baku, leaving behind a trail of controversy and criticism. Renowned historian Jamil Hasanli characterized the event as a vivid reflection of governance problems in Azerbaijan under President Ilham Aliyev. Hasanli, a staunch critic of the administration, described COP29 as an expensive spectacle that exposed systemic failures and intensified international scrutiny of Azerbaijan's political and economic structures.
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President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola has invited Azerbaijani economist and political prisoner Professor Gubad Ibadoglu to Strasbourg to attend the 2024 Sakharov Prize award ceremony. The invitation, delivered by Member of the European Parliament Michael Bloss at the COP29 climate conference, comes as Ibadoglu remains under house arrest and prohibited from leaving Azerbaijan.
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An operation at Istanbul Airport has revealed an incident that could strain diplomatic relations. Kahraman Shamil oglu Mammadov, alleged to be an Azerbaijani military attaché, was caught with 70 kilograms of gold. According to Turkish media, Despite Mammadov's claims that he is a diplomat, it is believed that the incident is related to gold smuggling.
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On a brisk November evening, the residents of Baku gathered along the waterfront of the Caspian Sea, stunned by what appeared to be the washed-up body of a colossal whale. At 16 meters long, the creature’s seemingly lifeless form and pungent odor left many convinced they were witnessing an ecological tragedy. By that night, however, the mysterious visitor had departed, loaded onto a cargo platform and whisked away to the airport.
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