Karabakh Armenians dissolve breakaway government in capitulation to
Azerbaijan
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[September 28, 2023]
By Felix Light
GORIS, Armenia (Reuters) - Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh said on
Thursday they were dissolving the breakaway statelet they had defended
for three decades, where more than half the population has fled since
Azerbaijan launched a lightning offensive last week.
In a statement, they said their self-declared Republic of Artsakh would
"cease to exist" by Jan. 1, in what amounted to a formal capitulation to
Azerbaijan.
For Azerbaijan and its president, Ilham Aliyev, the outcome is a
triumphant restoration of sovereignty over an area that is
internationally recognised as part of its territory but whose ethnic
Armenian majority won de facto independence in a war in the 1990s.
For Armenians, it is a defeat and a national tragedy.
Armenia said that by Thursday morning, 65,036 people had crossed into
its territory, out of an estimated population of 120,000.
"Analysis of the situation shows that in the coming days there will be
no Armenians left in Nagorno-Karabakh," Interfax news agency quoted
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan as saying. "This is an act of
ethnic cleansing."
Azerbaijan denies that accusation, saying it is not forcing people to
leave and that it will peacefully reintegrate the Karabakh region and
guarantee the civic rights of the ethnic Armenians.
Karabakh Armenians say they do not trust that promise, mindful of a long
history of bloodshed between the two sides including two wars since the
break-up of the Soviet Union. For days they have fled en masse down the
snaking mountain road through Azerbaijan that connects Karabakh to
Armenia.
The United States and other Western governments have expressed alarm
over the humanitarian crisis and demanded access for international
observers to monitor Azerbaijan's treatment of the local population.
Samantha Power, head of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID),
said this week she had heard "very troubling reports of violence against
civilians".
Azerbaijan said Aliyev had told her at a meeting on Wednesday that the
rights of ethnic Armenians would be protected by law, like those of
other minorities.
"The Azerbaijani president noted that the civilian population had not
been harmed during the anti-terrorist measures, and only illegal
Armenian armed formations and military facilities had been targeted," a
statement said.
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Truck driver and former soldier in Nagorno-Karabakh's army Karen
Martirosyan, 39, saying he picked up refugees from two other
broken-down trucks while driving from the frontline village of
Badara, speaks during an interview in the border village of
Kornidzor, Armenia, September 27, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze
Aliyev's office said on Thursday he was visiting Jabrayil, a city on
the southern edge of Karabakh that was destroyed by Armenian forces
in the 1990s, which Azerbaijan recaptured in 2020 and is now
rebuilding.
FORMER MINISTER CHARGED WITH FINANCING TERRORISM
While saying he had no quarrel with ordinary Karabakh Armenians,
Aliyev last week described their leaders as a "criminal junta" that
would be brought to justice.
A former head of Karabakh's government, Ruben Vardanyan, was
arrested on Wednesday as he tried to cross into Armenia.
Azerbaijan's state security service said on Thursday he was being
charged with financing terrorism and with illegally crossing the
Azerbaijani border last year.
David Babayan, an adviser to the Karabakh leadership, said in a
statement he was voluntarily giving himself up to the Azerbaijani
authorities.
Mass displacements have been a feature of the Karabakh conflict
since it broke out in the late 1980s as the Soviet Union headed
towards collapse.
Between 1988 and 1994 about 500,000 Azerbaijanis from Karabakh and
the areas around it were expelled from their homes, while the
conflict prompted 350,000 Armenians to leave Azerbaijan and 186,000
Azerbaijanis to leave Armenia, according to "Black Garden: Armenia
and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War", a 2003 book by Caucasus
scholar and analyst Thomas de Waal.
Many of the Armenians escaping this week in heavily laden cars,
trucks, buses and even tractors said they were hungry and fearful.
"This is one of the darkest pages of Armenian history," said Father
David, a 33-year-old Armenian priest who came to the border to
provide spiritual support for those arriving. "The whole of Armenian
history is full of hardships."
(Additional reporting by Nailia Bagirova and Anton Kolodyazhnyy;
writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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