Assistants of President of Azerbaijan Find Another �Enemy of Nation�
Baku / 21.12.17 / Turan: Two assistants to the President of Azerbaijan, Ali Hasanov and Novruz Mammadov, with diligence worthy of a better application, rushed to expose another "enemy" of Azerbaijan in the face of the British newspaper Financial Times.
Not having learned for many years to come up with a new version, Ali Hasanov and Novruz Mammadov say the article entitled The Council of Europe Renounces Human Rights? serves "the dirty interests of certain external anti-Azerbaijani circles."
Ali Hasanov is genuinely indignant about how they accuse the Azerbaijani authorities of violating the rights of citizens when Azerbaijan is known in the world as a country "developing along the road of democracy, having a strong economy and a high international authority, and ensuring all freedoms."
At the same time, he refers to the study "conducted by the order of the EU Eastern Partnership program by the Dutch humanitarian partner organization ACT LLC. (It's strange that Ali Hasanov suddenly began to respect the EU countries and the Eastern Partnership program, which he publicly scolded very severely).
Not inventing anything smarter, Hasanov accused the Armenian lobby of "trying to tarnish Azerbaijan's image", and the Financial Times newspaper of "becoming a tool in the hands of these circles."
As for Novruz Mammadov, he was able to "excel" by inventing something new, calling the Financial Times "an insidious and biased actor of international relations."
What this means, probably, only the students of Nakhchivan schools, where Mammadov once taught, could explain.
Unsatisfied with what has been achieved, Mammadov makes another geopolitical discovery and calls the Financial Times "responsible for the tensions in the international arena that have arisen today."
Further Mammadov slides down to the kitchen gossip level, which is already indecent to comment on. -02D-
Want to say
-
In Ukraine, a brutal, bloody war caused by Russian aggression continues, claiming lives, destroying homes, demolishing infrastructure, and inflicting incalculable harm on the environment and surrounding natural ecosystems. Ukraine, more than anyone else in this world, strives for peace, as we bear the daily brutality of this Russian-Ukrainian war. We are at the forefront of the struggle for the right to life, freedom, and justice. Ukraine seeks a just peace that will lay a solid foundation for a stable future for Europe and the World, and the only way of achieving this is to implement President Volodymyr Zelensky's Peace Formula (the Ukrainian Peace Formula).
-
On the eve of a large-scale flood approaching Baku, a disturbing incident occurred in the village of Buzovna, where a Lada Priora car fell into the ground, literally collapsing the road beneath it. The driver miraculously remained unharmed but vowed to seek justice, promising to file an official complaint with the prosecutor’s office against Azersu OJSC, the state-owned water supply and sewerage company, often associated with deeply rooted corruption.
-
In a bit of historic irony, powerful oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili has managed to inspire rare unity across Georgia’s cacophonous political scene twice in his life. His money and influence forged the broad-based consolidation of opposition forces that brought him to power in 2012, and now, 12 years and three electoral cycles later, a similar pattern of opposition convergence could send him packing.
-
Russian authorities and pro-Kremlin influencers have been spreading false information about alleged Reporters Without Borders (RSF) research into Nazi tendencies within the Ukrainian military, which was featured in a viral video falsely attributed to the BBC. RSF exposes the inner workings of a disinformation campaign designed to justify President Vladimir Putin's war narrative.
Leave a review