Ayaz Mütəllibov

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ayaz Mütəllibov (1992)

Ayaz Niyazi oğlu Mütəllibov ( Russian Аяз Ниязович Муталибов / Ajas Nijasowitsch Mutalibow ; born May 12, 1938 in Baku ) is an Azerbaijani politician . He was the last chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic and the first president of Azerbaijan, independent from the Soviet Union, from October 18, 1991 to May 14, 1992.

The president of the separatist and internationally not recognized Autonomous Talysh Mugan Republic (1993) supported Ayaz Mütallibov after the end of his presidency by swearing loyalty to him. In general, the revolt was seen as an attempt to bring the former president back to power in Azerbaijan.

Since then Ayaz Mütallibov has been chairman of the Azerbaijani Social Democratic Party . He has lived in Moscow , Russia , since 1992 . His wife is Adila Mütəllibova. He has two children, Zaur and Azad.

literature

Web links

swell

  1. A likely scenario is that this episode is another example of a powerful local warlord trying to take advantage of Azerbaijan's internal instability on this occasion through an appeal to ethnic Persian sentiment. Gummatov [Hummatov] had previously benefited under Mütallibov and it appears he bore a grudge against Aliyev. There are reports that the rebellious colonel once demanded the abdication of Aliyev and the return of Mütallibov as the price for ending the rebellion. Translation from Alvin Z. Rubinstein, Oles M. Smolansky: Regional Power Rivalries in the New Eurasia: Russia, Turkey, and Iran , ME Sharpe, 1995, ISBN 1-56324-623-6 , ISBN 978-1-56324-623- 4th
  2. Hummatov received support from the former Defense Minister Rahim Gaziev and swore allegiance to former President Ayaz Mütallibov. This revolt, which collapsed with almost no bloodshed in August, appeared as part of the larger Huseynov rebellion in Gəncə . Translation from Thomas De Waal: Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War , NYU Press, 2004, ISBN 0-8147-1945-7