I was born on April 22, 1965 in the village of Surakhany near the Azerbaijan capital of Baku in an important oil-producing area. I have lived there all my life. My late father worked in an engineering factory, while my mother worked in a library. She is retired now.
I became a journalist by accident. After I finished my studies at the Azerbaijan State Oil Academy, I was offered the chance to remain in the electromechanical engineering department and continue an academic career. But those were difficult times. The Soviet Union had just fallen apart and the war in Karabakh was going on between Azerbaijan and the Armenians. Salaries for teachers and professors were very low, and I needed to find a different way to earn money.
At that time, not many people knew how to work with computers, so I found it easy to get a job at Istiglal, the newspaper of the Social Democrats. I began to write articles for the title and was paid well. Eventually the editor suggested I should run the newspaper’s youth page.
After that I worked for other papers: Ekho, Seven Days, Zerkalo, Azadlyg. Gradually, journalism became my job.
Working at IWPR became a serious part of my education. At first, I used to mainly write myself, but then I steadily began to leave that to my younger IWPR colleagues and to pay more attention to training and editing work. Over the years with IWPR, I have spent a lot of time with trainers and with skilled western journalists, and have gained priceless experience, which I try to pass on to our students and younger authors.
I think the best part of my involvement with IWPR has been the chance to work in an international team, with journalists representing the opposite sides of the Caucasus conflict. In the course of our joint work, we have been able to gain each others’ trust, enabling us to write objective articles.
I have written many stories that I am proud of. I was particularly pleased with stories published in Zerkalo and Real Azerbaijan, in which I dealt with the bogus patriotism in society and the calls to go to war. I was criticised for it by the nationalists and the pro-government televisions stations, but I think it was necessary and important.
Being a journalist is like being an intermediary between two branches of society which have no opportunity to talk face to face. I am not a missionary, or a teacher, or a peacekeeper. These are all parts of the profession, but not the main thing. A journalist must be objective and impartial, he must think and act quickly, and not rely on prejudices or stereotypes. This did not come easy to me, and I am very grateful to my colleagues, my teachers and my pupils for their cooperation and help.
Stories by the Author
Reset in Azerbaijan-Armenia Talks Process?
High-level meetings after a long break offer hope of new momentum in long-running negotiations on Karabakh.
7 Nov 14
Karabakh Peace Process: Clutching at Straws?
The resumption of high-level Azerbaijan-Armenian meetings is seen as positive, but experts doubt 2014 will bring even incremental progress in the long-running negotiations.
20 Mar 14
Azerbaijanis Vote, Again and Again
As official results show a resounding win for Ilham Aliyev, reporters on the ground spot voters so keen to vote that they do so repeatedly.
21 Oct 13
OSCE Faces Fury for Calling Azeri Polls "Flawed"
Presidential advisor says country might review membership after OSCE observers announce “disrespectful” findings on ballot stuffing and other concerns.
11 Oct 13
Bad Books in Azerbaijan
IWPR’s country director had book confiscated just because it was published in Armenia.
12 Jun 13
Azerbaijanis Protest Against Army Deaths
Officials dismiss public expressions of anger as plot by agents provocateurs.
15 Mar 13
Armenia's Oscar Entry Enrages Azerbaijan
Film set out to portray humanity triumphant, but with Karabakh as backdrop, controversy was bound to follow.
5 Dec 12
Axe-Murderer Pardon Hardens Azeri, Armenian Attitudes
Celebrations in Baku and outrage in Yerevan as convicted killer is welcomed back to Azerbaijan.
14 Sep 12
High Hopes Fade as Karabakh Talks Fail
Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders can't agree how they would begin ending long-running dispute.
6 Jul 11
Ruling Party Triumphs in Controversial Azeri Poll
Opposition parties and international observers allege numerous irregularities.
9 Nov 10
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