Russia-Azerbaijan Tensions Soar, Threatening Moscow’s Influence

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Europe|Russia-Azerbaijan Tensions Soar, Threatening Moscow’s Influence

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/02/world/europe/russia-azerbaijan-tensions-safarov.html

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The rift, provoked by the deaths of two ethnic Azerbaijanis in Russian custody, was the latest in a series of spats that revealed a deeper diplomatic rift between the former allies.

A police vehicle in front of a stone building.
Azerbaijan’s embassy in Moscow on Wednesday. Tensions continued to grow this week between Russia and Azerbaijan, which was once considered one of Moscow’s closest partners among former Soviet states.Credit...Alexander Nemenov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Ivan Nechepurenko

July 2, 2025Updated 12:18 p.m. ET

Tensions rose sharply between Russia and the neighboring republic of Azerbaijan over the past week after two brothers, both ethnic Azerbaijanis, died in Russian custody, exposing a diplomatic crisis that threatens to further erode Moscow’s influence in the South Caucasus.

The two men, Huseyn and Ziyaddin Safarov, died after Russian investigators detained them last week as part of an inquiry into a series of cold case mafia-style assassinations in the industrial city of Yekaterinburg that occurred over the past 25 years.

One of the brothers died of heart failure, while the cause of death of the other one was being determined, Russian investigators said on Monday. On Wednesday, Russian investigators said they had charged six other detained Azerbaijanis, all Russian citizens, with murder.

Authorities in Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital, quickly denied the Russian version of events.

On Tuesday, the state prosecutor’s office of Azerbaijan said in a statement that the brothers had been subjected to “torture and murder with extreme cruelty” and that it had opened an investigation into the incident. And pro-government media outlets accused Moscow of deliberately targeting ethnic minorities as part of “chauvinist policies” used to “suppress internal dissent and strengthen totalitarian control.”

Image

In a screengrab from a video, mourners carry the coffins of Azerbaijani brothers Huseyn and Ziyaddin Safarov, who died in Russian police custody, to a cemetery in Hacibedelli, Azerbaijan,Credit...Reuters

Azerbaijan’s sharp reaction laid bare Moscow’s shrinking sway over a country that only a few years ago was considered one of its closest partners among former Soviet states. In 2022, just two days before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Moscow and Baku signed a “declaration on allied interaction.”


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