Gunfire Around Karabakh Persists Between Armenian, Azerbaijani Forces

BARRON'S

Oct 2 2023

FROM AFP NEWS

RECASTS with cross-border fire, ADDS toll, colour from Lachin and Stepanakert

Moscow said Russian and Azerbaijani forces on Monday came under sniper fire in Nagorno-Karabakh, days after Baku secured the surrender of Armenian separatists in an offensive to regain control of the mountainous territory.

The report came as Armenia said one serviceman was killed along its shared border with Azerbaijan, underscoring the volatility of the region even after Karabakh's capitulation last week.

"In the city of Stepanakert (Khankendi) a joint Russian-Azerbaijani patrol was shot at by an unknown person using a sniper weapon. There were no casualties," the Russian defence ministry said.

Russia deployed its peacekeepers to the mountainous region in 2020 as part of a ceasefire deal it had brokered between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

But mired in its war in Ukraine, Moscow refused to intervene when Azerbaijan launched a lightning offensive at the end of September.

Separatists capitulated and said 220 were killed in the fighting, while Azerbaijan reported 199 dead.

Another Armenian serviceman was killed when Azerbaijani forces opened fire near the eastern village of Kut on Monday, Armenia's defence ministry said.

It also announced two were wounded. Azerbaijan had rejected the claim.

Days after the lightning offensive, fighting has nevertheless subsided.

Almost all ethnic Armenians — over 100,000 people — have fled the breakaway territory over fears of ethnic cleansing.

After nine days of fear and panic, the exodus of Armenians is over with the Lachin corridor that links Karabakh to Armenia mostly deserted.

AFP journalists on a tour organised by Azerbaijani forces in the rebel stronghold of Stepanakert saw an eerily empty city.

Buildings, restaurants, hotels and supermarkets laid deserted in a city that once had 55,000 inhabitants.
Many were smashed up with empty shelves — signs of looting or hasty departures.
After three decades of Armenian control, the separatist authorities have agreed to disarm, dissolve their government and reintegrate with Azerbaijan.

The separatist government however said some officials would stay to oversee rescue operations.

President Samvel Shahramanyan "will stay in (Karabakh's main city of) Stepanakert with a group of officials until the search and rescue operations for the remainder of those killed and those missing… are completed," the separatist government said.

In addition to the toll from the fighting itself, another 170 people died when a fuel depot exploded during the massive exodus.

Separatist official Artak Beglaryan said "a few hundred" Armenian representatives remained in Karabakh.

He said they included "officials, emergency service, volunteers, some persons with special needs."

The separatist government said some officials would stay until rescue operations are completed

Emmanuel Dunand

Yerevan has accused Azerbaijan of conducting a campaign of "ethnic cleansing" to clear Karabakh of its Armenian population.

Baku has denied the claim and called on Armenian residents of the territory to stay and "re-integrate" into Azerbaijan, saying their rights would be guaranteed.

AFP journalists on Monday saw a convoy carrying water and communications workers that was allowed to enter Stepanakert.

The convoy was escorted by the Azerbaijani army.

They also saw a bus carrying officials who planned to open a "re-integration" office in the city for any ethnic Armenians wishing to register with Azerbaijani authorities.

Azerbaijan is holding "re-integration" talks with separatist leaders.

Several senior representatives of its former government and military command have been detained, including Ruben Vardanyan — a reported billionaire who headed the Nagorno-Karabakh government between November 2022 and February.

His four children released a statement on social media demanding his release "from the illegal imprisonment on the territory of Azerbaijan", saying they "feared for his life and health".

Azerbaijan's Prosecutor General Kamran Aliyev said criminal investigations had been initiated into war crimes committed by 300 separatist officials.

"I urge those persons to surrender voluntarily," he told journalists on Sunday.

Nagorno-Karabakh enclave emptied after entire ethnic Armenian population flees

ABC News
Oct 2 2023

More than 100,000 Armenians have fled in what's being called "ethnic cleansing."

ByPatrick Reevell

LONDON – Virtually the entire ethnic Armenian population of the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh has fled, with the last buses carrying refugees having left on Monday, according to Russia's peacekeeping force deployed there.

More than 100,000 ethnic Armenians left the enclave in the last week, according to local officials, abandoning their homes after Azerbaijan, backed by Turkey, recaptured the region with a military offensive just over a week ago.

The exodus has emptied the enclave in what Armenia has condemned as "ethnic cleansing."

A television news crew from Al Jazeera showed the region's capital, known to Armenians as Stepanakert, completely deserted. The city, which had a population estimated at more than 50,000, appeared now to be a ghost town. The Al Jazeera crew showed the city's central square abandoned and strewn with empty chairs, used by people waiting for evacuation.

Before Azerbaijan's offensive, the enclave's population was estimated at 120,000. But a spokesperson for the Karabakh Armenians' unrecognized state's emergency services ministry on Sunday said only a tiny handful of people now remained in the enclave.

Azerbaijan's authoritarian president, Ilham Aliyev, announced plans for Nagorno-Karabakh's reintegration into his country, signaling he intended to quickly restore strong control over it.

The region will now be overseen by special representative offices to Azerbaijan's president and security will be handled by Azerbaijan's interior ministry, Aliyev said. Azerbaijan's currency, the manat, would be reintroduced.

Aliyev said the equality of rights and freedoms, including security, would be guaranteed for all residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, and it would be permitted to use Armenian there. He also pledged that religious freedoms would be guaranteed, and cultural and religious monuments protected.

The pledges appeared to ignore the fact that the enclave's Armenian population had already fled. The Armenians fleeing have said they don't believe Azerbaijan's guarantees of their rights and fear they would face persecution.

A United Nations mission also arrived in Nagorno-Karabakh Sunday to assess humanitarian needs, but it faced heavy criticism from local ethnic Armenian authorities who said they were far too late, given the civilian population was no longer there.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been at the center of a bloody conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan for decades. Internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, it had been home to an ethnic Armenian population for centuries. As the Soviet Union collapsed in the late 1980s into the early 1990s, Nagorno-Karabakh's Armenians tried to break away from Azerbaijan, declaring independence.

A bloody war, in which Armenia aided the separatists, saw hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijani civilians also driven out of the region and ended with ethnic Armenians controlling most of Nagorno-Karabakh with their own unrecognized state.

But Azerbaijan reopened the conflict in 2020, starting a full-scale war that decisively defeated Armenia and ended with a truce deal brokered by Russia, which deployed peacekeepers to enforce it.

Two weeks ago, after blockading the enclave for nine months, Azerbaijan launched a new offensive, swiftly defeating the ethnic Armenian authorities in two days. The enclave's population started fleeing shortly afterward to Armenia.

There has been little international response to the crisis. Western countries, including the U.S. and France, have expressed concern and called for Azerbaijan to protect the rights of the Armenians. The Biden administration announced $11.5 million in humanitarian aid and dispatched the high-profile head of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Samantha Power, to the region last week.

Richard Giragosian, the director of the Regional Studies Center based in Yerevan, Armenia's capital, said the international response was "too little too late" and had set a "dangerous precedent."

"[This was] a seeming vindication of the use of force over diplomacy," Giragosian told ABC News by phone. "A military victory of authoritarian power over a struggling democracy."

But he said it had also shown the West has little influence over Azerbaijan. "What we see is Azerbaijan simply does not care about Western threats, pronouncements, and at the same time, the West has little leverage over Azerbaijan," Giragosian said.

Armenia's defense ministry on Monday also accused Azerbaijani forces of opening fire on a car carrying food to an Armenian border post near the village of Kut.

Azerbaijani forces are likely to move into Nagorno-Karabakh's now-empty capital, which it calls Khankhendi, in the next few days.

Russia's peacekeeping contingent said a joint Russian-Azerbaijani patrol came under sniper fire inside Nagorno-Karabakh on Monday, but that there were no casualties.

A meeting of representatives from Azerbaijan and the Karabakh Armenian leadership will take place for the first time in the capital in the "near future," the news agency of the enclave's unrecognized Armenian state reported Monday.

Francois Hollande: Abandoning Armenia would be disgrace for France, shame for Europe

new.am, Armenia
Oct 2 2023

Abandoning Armenia would be a disgrace for France and a shame for Europe. The time has come to declare decisively and convincingly that its borders are sacred, said former French President Francois Hollande.

"When I was the president, I participated in mediation efforts to find a solution to the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. That experience forces me to issue a warning. Today, justice and honor require France to do everything possible to help Armenians," Hollande said.

In his opinion, by turning its back on Armenia, Russia pursues several goals.

"First, it will enable [Russian President] Putin to neutralize [Turkish President] Erdogan, whose role has increased after the invasion of Ukraine. Second, to sign an alliance with Azerbaijan regarding [natural] gas. Thirdly, to punish Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for leaving Moscow and getting closer to Europe. The result of that cynical turn is terrible at the humanitarian level. 120,000 Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians are desperately trying to flee to their homeland, and the vast majority of them have already gone there [to Armenia]. Others are hungry; they are persecuted and threatened [by Azerbaijan]. Their houses are abandoned or burned, their churches—destroyed. Ethnic cleansing continues. There is a danger to the lives of many of them… But the worst is ahead because the territorial integrity of Armenia may suffer.

"Vladimir Putin contributes to all this; having failed in Ukraine, he intends to take revenge in the Caucasus. He is determined to show that Armenia is in danger of disappearing without Russian control. Erdogan, who has not given up on his Ottoman dream, pushes Azerbaijan to go as far as possible in its action.

"As for the Europeans, they are sparing Baku so as not to lose the new source of supplies. The Americans do a lot to help Ukraine, but they may consider that the Caucasus is too far from them.

"Therefore, the time has come to declare decisively and convincingly that the borders of Armenia are sacred and they must be guaranteed. France should be at the forefront," said former French President Francois Hollande.


UN Karabakh mission told ‘sudden’ exodus means as few as 50 ethnic Armenians may remain

United Nations News
Oct 2 2023

As few as 50 to 1,000 ethnic Armenians are reported to be left in the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan after the exodus of recent days saw more than 100,000 flee, the first UN mission to the region in 30 years reported on Monday.

In a statement issued following Sunday’s mission led by the UN’s Resident Coordinator in Azerbaijan, together with other senior agency officials, they heard and saw for themselves that in the city of Khankendi at least, there were no signs of damage to public buildings.

“The mission was struck by the sudden manner in which the local population left their homes and the suffering the experience must have caused,” the UN team said.

The team added that they did not hear – from either locals interviewed or others – of incidences of violence against civilians following the latest ceasefire.

“The team heard from interlocutors that between 50 and 1,000 ethnic Armenians remain in the Karabakh region.”

During their visit, the UN team travelled from Aghdam to Khankendi, which is also known by ethnic Armenians as Stepanakert.

In the areas they visited, there was no visible damage to public infrastructure, including hospitals, schools, housing, or cultural and religious structures. Additionally, shops were closed.

The team noted that the Government of Azerbaijan was making preparations to restore health services and certain utilities in the city.  

The mission did not get access to rural areas, but did not see any signs of destruction of agricultural infrastructure or livestock.

The mission followed the Lachin road to the border crossing, a route taken by over 100,000 ethnic Armenians in recent days. They did not encounter civilian vehicles heading towards Armenia.  

The team said that “it is difficult to determine at this stage whether the local population intends to return”, from the conversations they were able to have.

What was clear is that there is a need to build trust and confidence, and this will require time and effort from all sides, the statement added.

It also called for all efforts to be made to ensure the protection of the rights of the local population, adding that the UN team in Azerbaijan stands ready to support the remaining local population and those who wish to return, in support of the Government of Azerbaijan.

© WHO/Nazik Armenakyan

 

Refugees at a registration centre in Goris, Armenia, on 29 September.

In Armenia, the majority of refugees who arrived in the border town of Goris have since dispersed to other parts of the country.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has reported that many of those who sought refuge in Armenia undertook arduous journeys, often walking for days and finding shelter in caves or basements, enduring extremely challenging conditions.

“There are reports of malnutrition, particularly among the elderly and among children, and diseases such as high fevers and pneumonia,” Joe Lowry, IOM spokesperson told UN News in an interview on Monday from Yerevan, Armenia.

Soundcloud

Collaborating closely with the Government of Armenia, UN teams in the country are making mental health support a top priority for the refugees. On Monday, IOM opened two mobile clinics, with four more to be opened in the coming days.

The clinics will have trained psychologist on hand to help people with their immediate mental health and psychosocial needs, and to refer them onward for care, as needed, he told UN News.

Other UN agencies also continue their response. On Monday, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) delivered vital medical supplies, including bandages, syringes and medications.

The UN Population Fund (UNFPA), for its part, is delivering hygiene kits to refugee women and girls in several regions in Armenia. It also trained local partners on responding to gender-based violence, and plans to set up safe spaces where survivors can access medical and mental health services.

Given the influx of approximately 100,000 into a country with a population of around three million, there will be a significant demand for the expansion of national services. This includes bolstering educational institutions and healthcare facilities.

“People will need new schools, which will have to be built – it won’t be a case of adding four or five more chairs into a classroom – new schools or wings on schools will have to be built, the same for hospitals, too,” Mr. Lowry said.

He emphasized that the arrivals would also need livelihood assistance, such as jobs, and new homes. At the same time, the host community will also require support.

Armenia and Israel, the Middle East’s last Judeo-Christian nations

Washington Times
Oct 2 2023

On opposite ends of the geopolitical playing field

Many American Christians have probably never heard of the small nation of Armenia, but this country of 3 million people holds tremendous spiritual significance for the global church.

In A.D. 301, Armenia became the first nation to embrace Christianity (even before the Roman Empire). The gospel was originally brought to the Armenian people by the Apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew in the first century. In addition, Mount Ararat, the focal point of Armenian culture and spirituality, is the place where Noah’s Ark landed after the flood in Genesis.

Apart from Israel, it is probably the most biblically significant nation in the world.

The similarities between Armenia and Israel do not stop there. For one, they are both Judeo-Christian democracies in a sea of Muslim authoritarian states. Armenia gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 and has made a concerted effort in recent years to align itself more closely with the Western world despite Russia’s best efforts to stop it from doing so.

Like Israel, the central defining characteristic of Armenia is its faith. Through centuries of war and hardship, the Armenian Church is the glue that has held Armenian society together.

Sadly, like Israelis, Armenians are no strangers to mass murder. In the 19th and 20th centuries, the Ottoman Empire (modern Turkey) waged a campaign against the empire’s Christians in which 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered. The events, which are widely seen by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century, are often referred to as “the forgotten genocide” (Turkey disputes the characterization of these events as a genocide).

Hitler, while devising his Final Solution for the Jewish people, invoked those mass murders, stating, “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians.”

While both the Armenian and Israeli people were eventually able to establish modern nation-states, the historic centers of their civilizations lie outside their current borders. The biblical heart of Israel, Judea, falls within the Palestinian West Bank. Artsakh, in many ways considered the cultural capital of Armenia, is being religiously cleansed of its Armenian Christians by Azerbaijan.

And while both nations look longingly on their ancient lands, they are also preoccupied with defending their immediate borders from hostile neighbors.

Israel is forced to contend with Hamas in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, Hezbollah to the north, and Bashar Assad’s Syria. Armenia, on the other hand, is sandwiched between Turkey and Azerbaijan. Both countries deny that Armenians were subject to genocide and refuse to open their borders to Armenian transit. This means that the vast majority of the landlocked Armenian border is also under a blockade.

Despite their similarities, Armenia and Israel find themselves on opposite ends of the geopolitical playing field. Israel, in order to balance against Iranian influence in the region, has developed close ties with Azerbaijan, the country committing ethnic and religious cleansing against the Armenians of Artsakh. Similarly, Armenia has developed ties with Iran, a nation openly committed to Israel’s destruction, in an attempt to balance against its own existential threats, Turkey and Azerbaijan.

The sad reality is that the region’s only two Judeo-Christian nations have developed a horrible relationship, driven by the need to survive in a region dominated by hostile Muslim states.

But there is hope. Because of the two nations’ shared values and history, the gap can be overcome given the proper security structure in the region.

If Armenia had the security backing of the region’s greatest power, the United States, it could begin to wean itself off its dependence on Iran. Similarly, the United States is the only nation influential enough to convince Israel to lessen its dependence on Azerbaijan.

It is a tragedy to see these two nations, sister nations, divided and torn apart by the existential threats of the region. The United States is the only nation capable of uniting the Middle East’s last two democratic Judeo-Christian nations.

• Former Sen. Sam Brownback, Kansas Republican, is a former U.S. ambassador at large for international religious freedom and co-chair of the IRF Summit.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/oct/2/armenia-and-israel-middle-easts-last-judeo-christi/

Gunfire in Nagorno-Karabahk persists between Armenian, Azerbaijani forces

France 24
Oct 2 2023

Moscow said Russian and Azerbaijani forces on Monday came under sniper fire in Nagorno-Karabakh, days after Baku secured the surrender of Armenian separatists in an offensive to regain control of the mountainous territory.

The report came as Armenia said one serviceman was killed along its shared border with Azerbaijan, underscoring the volatility of the region even after Karabakh's capitulation last week.

"In the city of Stepanakert (Khankendi) a joint Russian-Azerbaijani patrol was shot at by an unknown person using a sniper weapon. There were no casualties," the Russian defence ministry said.

Russia deployed its peacekeepers to the mountainous region in 2020 as part of a ceasefire deal it had brokered between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

But mired in its war in Ukraine, Moscow refused to intervene when Azerbaijan launched a lightning offensive at the end of September.

Separatists capitulated and said 220 were killed in the fighting, while Azerbaijan reported 199 dead.

Another Armenian serviceman was killed when Azerbaijani forces opened fire near the eastern village of Kut on Monday, Armenia's defence ministry said.

It also announced two were wounded. Azerbaijan had rejected the claim.

Days after the lightning offensive, fighting has nevertheless subsided.

Almost all ethnic Armenians — over 100,000 people – have fled the breakaway territory over fears of ethnic cleansing.

After nine days of fear and panic, the exodus of Armenians is over with the Lachin corridor that links Karabakh to Armenia mostly deserted.

AFP journalists on a tour organised by Azerbaijani forces in the rebel stronghold of Stepanakert saw an eerily empty city.

Buildings, restaurants, hotels and supermarkets laid deserted in a city that once had 55,000 inhabitants.

Many were smashed up with empty shelves — signs of looting or hasty departures.

After three decades of Armenian control, the separatist authorities have agreed to disarm, dissolve their government and reintegrate with Azerbaijan.

The separatist government however said some officials would stay to oversee rescue operations.

President Samvel Shahramanyan "will stay in (Karabakh's main city of) Stepanakert with a group of officials until the search and rescue operations for the remainder of those killed and those missing… are completed," the separatist government said.

In addition to the toll from the fighting itself, another 170 people died when a fuel depot exploded during the massive exodus.

Separatist official Artak Beglaryan said "a few hundred" Armenian representatives remained in Karabakh.

He said they included "officials, emergency service, volunteers, some persons with special needs."

Yerevan has accused Azerbaijan of conducting a campaign of "ethnic cleansing" to clear Karabakh of its Armenian population.

Baku has denied the claim and called on Armenian residents of the territory to stay and "re-integrate" into Azerbaijan, saying their rights would be guaranteed.

AFP journalists on Monday saw a convoy carrying water and communications workers that was allowed to enter Stepanakert.

The convoy was escorted by the Azerbaijani army.

They also saw a bus carrying officials who planned to open a "re-integration" office in the city for any ethnic Armenians wishing to register with Azerbaijani authorities.

Azerbaijan is holding "re-integration" talks with separatist leaders.

Several senior representatives of its former government and military command have been detained, including Ruben Vardanyan — a reported billionaire who headed the Nagorno-Karabakh government between November 2022 and February.

His four children released a statement on social media demanding his release "from the illegal imprisonment on the territory of Azerbaijan", saying they "feared for his life and health".

Azerbaijan's Prosecutor General Kamran Aliyev said criminal investigations had been initiated into war crimes committed by 300 separatist officials.

"I urge those persons to surrender voluntarily," he told journalists on Sunday.

(AFP)

https://www.france24.com/en/asia-pacific/20231002-azerbaijan-cross-border-fire-kills-one-injures-two-armenia-says

Last bus leaves Nagorno-Karabakh, deadly clashes continue

DW – Deutsche Welle, Germany
Oct 2 2023

A UN mission said it was struck by the "sudden manner" more than 100,000 people left the separatist region over the past week. Meanwhile, Armenia called for on the European Union to sanction Azerbaijan.

The last bus carrying ethnic Armenians from the Nagorno-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan left on Monday, Gegham Stepanyan, the region's human rights ombudsman, said.

Azerbaijani forces seized control of Nagorno-Karabakh from separatists, primarily ethnic Armenians, triggering an exodus of more than 100,000 people in less than a week.

According to the Armenian government, 100,514 of the region's estimated 120,000 residents crossed into Armenia by Monday.

Armenia wants the European Union to sanction Azerbaijan for its military operation, the country's envoy to Brussels said on Monday.

Tigran Balayan said sanctions could include a price cap on Azerbaijani oil and gas and the suspension of EU talks on closer relations with Baku.

He has also urged the West to deliver "bold" security assistance to Armenia.

Armenia reported that an Azerbaijani attack killed a soldier in a border region, highlighting the ongoing instability.

Moscow said Russian peacekeepers and Azerbaijani forces also came under sniper fire on Monday.

"A joint Russian-Azerbaijani patrol was shot at by an unknown person using a sniper weapon. There were no casualties," the Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement.

A United Nations team that arrived in Nagorno-Karabakh on Sunday said it was "struck by the sudden manner in which the local population fled their homes and the suffering that the experience must have caused them."

UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric, however, added the team did not see any damage to civilian infrastructure such as hospitals, schools, and housing or to cultural and religious sites after the recent fighting.

Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of carrying out a campaign of "ethnic cleansing," a charge denied by Baku.

It had urged ethnic Armenians of the enclave to "reintegrate" into Azerbaijan.

lo/msh (AP, AFP, Reuters)

https://www.dw.com/en/last-bus-leaves-nagorno-karabakh-deadly-clashes-continue/a-66984970

Armenian Refugees Say No Hope of Return to Nagorno-Karabakh

Voice of America
Oct 2 2023

Heather Murdock

Nearly the entire population of ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh have fled to Armenia, and the one-time residents of the self-declared Republic of Artsakh are scattered. But as VOA’s Heather Murdock reports from Ishkhanasar and Kornidzor near the Armenia border with Azerbaijan, many fear the war that drove them out is not over. Yan Boechat contributed. Camera: Yan Boechat

https://www.voanews.com/a/armenian-refugees-say-no-hope-of-return-to-nagorno-karabakh/7293658.html

Israel among Armenia’s geopolitical concerns after Nagorno-Karabakh collapse

The Times of Israel
Oct 2 2023

PARIS, France (AFP) – Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh have, after three decades of struggle, agreed to disarm, dissolve their government and reintegrate with Azerbaijan after Baku seized back control in late September.

The collapse of the breakaway statelet could shift the balance of power in the region while leaving Yerevan facing a raft of geopolitical concerns.

Nearly all of Karabakh’s estimated 120,000 residents have now fled, with Yerevan accusing Azerbaijan of conducting a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” to clear the territory.

But Baku has denied the claim and publicly called on Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population to stay and “reintegrate” into Azerbaijan.

Russia, a long-standing ally of Armenia, insisted those fleeing the territory had nothing to fear, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying: “It’s difficult to say who is to blame [for the exodus]. There is no direct reason for such actions.”

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has criticized the Russian peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh for failing to intervene during Baku’s lightning offensive, which Moscow has denied.

Nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the mountainous region in 2020 as part of a ceasefire deal it brokered between Azerbaijan and Armenia that ended six weeks of fighting.

But Russia gave a lukewarm response to the announcement last week that the ethnic Armenian statelet of Karabakh would cease to exist at the end of the year.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has criticized the Russian peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh for failing to intervene during Baku’s lightning offensive, which Moscow has denied.

Nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the mountainous region in 2020 as part of a ceasefire deal it brokered between Azerbaijan and Armenia that ended six weeks of fighting.

But Russia gave a lukewarm response to the announcement last week that the ethnic Armenian statelet of Karabakh would cease to exist at the end of the year.

A complex hangover from the Soviet era, the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan, a landlocked autonomous republic, does not share a border with Azerbaijan but has been tied to Baku since the 1920s. It is located between Armenia, Turkey and Iran.

Some experts believe that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev could now seek to launch operations in southern Armenia to create a territorial link with Nakhchivan.

Allies Turkey and Azerbaijan had said in June they wanted to step up efforts to open a land corridor linking Turkey to Azerbaijan’s main territory via Nakhchivan and Armenia, a longstanding and complex project.

A few days after Azerbaijan’s lightning offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh on September 19 and 20, Aliyev met his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the exclave.

Aliyev recently referred to southern Armenia as “Western Azerbaijan” and in December said Azerbaijanis “must be able to return to their native lands.”

He went further in February 2018, when he told a press conference: “Yerevan is our historic land… We Azerbaijanis must return to our historic lands.”

The alliance between Turkey and Azerbaijan, both mainly Muslim, is fueled by a mutual mistrust of largely Christian Armenia.

The latter harbors hostility towards Ankara over the massacres of some 1.5 million Armenians by Turkey during the dying days of the Ottoman Empire.

More than 30 countries have recognized the killings as genocide, although Ankara fiercely disputes the term.

Another major geopolitical player in the region is Iran, which has commercial interests in Armenia’s future.

Iran sees Armenia as its commercial gateway to the Caucasus and therefore “does not want to see the border move” to favor Azerbaijan, said Taline Ter Minassian, a professor at France’s National Institute for Oriental Languages and Civilizations.

The reasons are also geostrategic, as Azerbaijan has for years been drawing nearer to Israel, Tehran’s arch-enemy.

Israel accounted for almost 70 percent of arms sales to Azerbaijan between 2016 and 2020, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

The French Centre for Intelligence Research has said that Israel has built “several electronic intelligence stations” in Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s key ally Turkey is also a member of NATO, the US-led military alliance with which Iran is also at loggerheads.

In the absence of a convincing Western commitment to Armenia, its “only protection so far has been Iran,” said Jean-Louis Bourlanges, chair of the French Foreign Affairs Committee.

“It’s a very fragile and worrying guarantee,” he added.

https://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-among-armenias-geopolitical-concerns-after-nagorno-karabakh-collapse/

Baku has won, Armenians are leaving NK: Opinions of all sides of the conflict

Oct 2 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Baku-Yerevan

What will happen next in Nagorno-Karabakh

Is the Karabakh conflict over? This question is being asked by societies and experts in Armenia and Azerbaijan. Baku is celebrating victory, and Karabakh Armenians are leaving their homes — some saying goodbye to their homeland forever, some hoping to return.

What will happen next, what do people expect? Residents of Yerevan and Baku talk about it on video, Azerbaijani and Armenian analysts share their predictions. JAMnews journalists also talked to Karabakh Armenians – a woman who talked about what the situation in NK is like now, waiting to leave for Armenia, and a journalist who has already reached Goris.


  • The unrecognised NKR will cease to exist on 1 January by its own decision
  • “NK issue will become a bargaining subject for Baku with Russia and the West”. Opinion
  • Azerbaijani court arrests Ruben Vardanyan
  • “Baku will try to preserve Armenians in NK as a museum piece”. Opinion

Author – Armine Martirosyan, Yerevan

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has alternated between phases of hostilities and truce for decades. There have been ethnic cleansing of Armenian settlements more than once since the Soviet era, and people have survived more than one deportation. But Armenians continued to live on this land. Azerbaijan’s military operation on September 19, conducted after 10 months of blockade, changed the situation fundamentally.

“In connection with the created complicated military-political situation, based on the priority of ensuring the physical security and vital interests of the people of Artsakh […] the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) hereby ceases to exist,” announced the leadership of the NKR, never recognized by any nation.

Its residents began to leave en masse on September 24, as soon as the Lachin corridor was unblocked. Assistant to the President of Azerbaijan, Hikmet Hajiyev, announced that “no one is forcing Armenians to leave Karabakh, and it is a personal and individual decision for everyone”.

The Armenian Ambassador for Special Assignments responded to this statement by listing the reasons why people are leaving:

  1. “People are leaving because they are being attacked by the Azerbaijani military.
  2. “People are leaving because their towns and villages are occupied by the Azerbaijani armed forces.
  3. “People are leaving because neither the international community nor Azerbaijan guarantees their rights and security.
  4. People are leaving because for 10 months Azerbaijan has kept 120,000 people, including 30,000 children, blockaded and starved them as part of its ethnic cleansing policy.
  5. People are leaving because no one has been punished for Azerbaijan’s war crimes in 2016-2020, and there is no guarantee that beheaders will not roam freely in these territories to behead new victims.”

What do Karabakhis themselves say about the situation? Two of them shared their stories.

“The government building is one of the few places in Stepanakert where you can charge your phone. I have been here since early morning – more than 7 hours, with three phones of our family members and an elderly neighbor.

There’s a lot of people here. I was lucky to find an empty socket. Many people’s phones are old and lose their charge quickly, so I have to charge them every day. I’m also charging a lamp for the children’s room.

While this text was being prepared, it was reported that Azerbaijan disrupted the work of the telecommunications operator Karabakh Telecom, actually leaving NK residents without cellular communication. Azerbaijanis destroyed a 50-meter cross near Stepanakert, which also served as a cell phone tower. Now Armenians who left Nagorno-Karabakh have lost contact with their relatives waiting for their turn to leave.
We spoke to Arshaluys before the connection was cut off.

Unfortunately, I can’t charge the power bank today, because I have to go into town to look for bread. In the morning I was told that bread was available only in two places, but my friends warned me that there was only one. It’s scary to think what kind of line there is, but we’ve been without bread for a week — we’ll have to stand.

Communication and bread are the most necessary things for us now. Of course, we still need to ensure that all Artsakh residents can go to Armenia. But whether the local authorities will do this is a big question. After all, the Russians need our presence to continue to keep their troops here, and the Artsakh authorities are unlikely to go against Russia’s interests. We are all hostages.

“We made an unambiguous decision to leave, no matter how hard it would be to leave our native land. At this stage, joint coexistence between Armenians and Azerbaijanis, especially within the state of Azerbaijan, is impossible.

It is ridiculous and disgusting to hear the speeches of various representatives of the centers of power when they express satisfaction with the speedy resolution of the Karabakh conflict and the advent of an era of peace between our peoples.

If they really wanted to promote Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation, they would have taken a completely different path. This is a very long and difficult road, generations must change, and a democratic government must emerge that will switch from Armenianophobia to constructive human dialogue.

JAMnews journalists talked to those who came from Nagorno-Karabakh to the Armenian town of Goris. They told the stories of their families and expressed their opinions about what is happening

But now this is a fantasy, and we have another genocide, not a desire to “reconcile”. And the genocide is accompanied by unconcealed Armenian hatred, the intention to suppress and self-assert, to avenge the defeat in the first Karabakh war, which they themselves, in fact, unleashed.

And it is not difficult to imagine some aspects of Armenian life under Azerbaijan. For example, in school children will be taught that all Armenian cultural and historical monuments and churches on the territory of Karabakh are actually “Caucasian Albanian” [a former territory in what is now Azerbaijan]. And in the course of modern history our children will have to condemn “Armenian separatism” and glorify the Azerbaijani ascetic victor.

Not to mention that young Armenian boys, along with all citizens of this state, will join the army, and in the next military conflict with Armenia they will be obliged to follow orders.

Fresh graves at a cemetery in Stepanakert after the September hostilities. Photo: Marut Vanyan

One can understand when lonely old people talk about staying and dying on their land. But young people and children will have no life here.

“We will go to Armenia – into the complete unknown. We will try to rent a house somewhere in the suburbs of Yerevan, there will be several families of us, to ease the burden of rent. Perhaps this is the only thing we can look forward to in the near future. We can’t plan anything else, we don’t know what will happen. The main thing is to get out alive.

“I am already in Goris. The war that Azerbaijan started on September 19, followed by the tragic incident at the fuel depot, made us forget about the 10-month blockade in Karabakh. The explosion of the fuel tanks left a heavier imprint than the explosions of shells, the sounds of which still ring in my ears.

For the first time in ten months I took a shower. Of course, this did not wash away all the hardships and burdens, but there was a strange feeling of comfort.

After the September military actions in MK, Armenian expert circles speak about the uselessness of the Russian presence in the region, and a change in the vector of the country’s foreign policy is actively discussed

“On the way from Stepanakert we didn’t take much with us, we thought we would be in Goris in a few hours. There was only chocolate in the car. They gave me a treat, and I never liked sweets at all.

The road was very long: two meters to drive – two hours to wait, another two meters to drive – another two hours to wait. For a full day we were on the road in this awful situation.

This column of cars in four rows started, without any exaggeration, from the church in Stepanakert to the Khakari Bridge and further – more than 60 kilometers. Between the cars there were trucks, sometimes even defective cars and tractors tied to them. Children are crying, people are hungry and cold. And no one ven knows what will happen. Will you get over the bridge or not, what will happen at the checkpoint, where will you sleep?

Suddenly, someone nearby receives a message about children who were victims of a fuel depot explosion. Someone in all this chaos decides to go back. And you are so tired when you have gone through all this hell, you haven’t slept for 24 hours, you fall asleep in the car. And you feel like you’re having a nightmare, but you open your eyes and it turns out to be reality.

“We got to Goris. The first thing we saw was a bakery. Can you imagine, 5-6 women baking bread, and there was no line for bread. Recently there was no bread at all in Stepanakert. Something like bread that you can break your teeth on was sold in rare places, and elderly people complained that they had dentures, it was impossible to eat such bread.

In Goris’ supermarket, my eyes lit up when I saw soap on the shelves. I have never liked chocolate, but the shiny candy wrappers fascinated me, I was as happy as a child.

In Stepanakert I was often asked by different international media to film stores. I filmed those empty shelves so much that I never imagined another supermarket.

Once the priest of Stepanakert church found a handful of candy from somewhere and distributed it to the children. You should have seen their happy eyes.

“In a hotel in Goris, I wanted to open the room door with my apartment key. I got out my keys out of habit. I left the apartment, but took the keys.

Now all events are happening so fast that you don’t have time to think about anything. It will be a while before we start to realize what happened to us.

Only now I am beginning to understand the feelings of our Diaspora Armenians. Before, I wondered why they were always suffering. They live in Paris and Glendale and have everything they need.

Here is video shot by Marut Vanyan in NK on September 24, then on the way to Armenia – in the early morning of September 25. The last shot is in Goris, at the center for assisting arriving Karabakh Armenians.

Author – Artur Khachatryan, Yerevan

What was so feared in Armenia and wanted so much in Azerbaijan happened. Nagorno-Karabakh endured a total blockade for 10 months, but was subjected to a new military attack by Baku and failed to hold out. The Armenian authorities refrained from military intervention. As a result, the one-day war ended with the disarmament of the local Defense Army, and a mass exodus of the Armenian population from Nagorno-Karabakh began.


  • “Armenia will receive our brothers and sisters leaving NK” – Pashinyan
  • Reintegration of Karabakh Armenians. “This is fantastic!”
  • “Passivity equals complicity”. Discussion of the war in Karabakh in the UN Security Council

After the beginning of the “counter-terrorist operation” of Azerbaijan, the Armenian Ministry of Defense, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Prime Minister’s Office persistently kept silent. A wave of indignation started in social networks. There were speculations that the Armenian leadership might decide to intervene militarily. However, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s address answered the questions hanging in the air:

“Attempts to drag Armenia into military escalation are unacceptable, we will manage this process. As much as we understand the worries and other emotional issues in this situation. But we must not allow some external and internal forces to jeopardize Armenia’s statehood.”

Thus the Armenian Prime Minister immediately made it clear that despite the stalemate situation, official Yerevan would not come to the aid of the army of the unrecognized NKR. Even then it was clear that the fall of Karabakh was a matter of hours or days. And so it happened.

Could the Armenian army enter Nagorno-Karabakh? Political scientist Ruben Mehrabyan thinks not, because in this case Armenia itself might come under attack:

“Armenia would not take part in this, because it would mean that Armenia would be exposed as a party that is encroaching on the territory of a neighboring state. In any case, this is how Aliyev would have presented Armenia’s actions. Plus, he would reserve the right to exert military influence directly on the territory of Armenia itself. As we know, the balance of forces is such that, except for damage, this can bring nothing to Armenia”.

Armenia does not have the resources to wage a full-scale war now, says former Armenian Ambassador to Canada Ara Papyan. But the Armenian authorities themselves are to blame for this, as they failed to reform the army after the 2020 war, the diplomat believes. He also says:

“Nikol Pashinyan is personally guilty for this situation because he spoke in such a spirit that Azerbaijan considered Nagorno-Karabakh as its internal affair. He did nothing practically and did nothing to reorient the country towards the West.”

“The events in Karabakh are Armenia’s new, westernized path and Russia’s expulsion from the Caucasus. Have the Abkhazians and Ossetians realized this?” – Georgian experts comment

Will the Armenian population remain in Karabakh? The answer to this question is becoming clearer by the day. Two days after the cessation of hostilities, Azerbaijan allowed fuel to enter the republic and simultaneously opened the Lachin corridor. True, only towards Armenia. And for the first three days about 40,000 Armenians left their homeland. By the time of publication of the piece it is reported that about 100,000 people have already arrived in Armenia. Before the recent events about 120,000 people lived here.

Doctor of Political Science at Stanford University Arthur Khachikian does not see any prospect of any Armenian remaining in Nagorno-Karabakh:

“It’s hard for me to imagine how, after such atrocities, killings, bullying, violence against the civilian population, there will be any Armenians left there after all this. This was done precisely to intimidate the population.”

However, Ara Papyan believes that a small Armenian population may remain in Nagorno-Karabakh. He suggests that the Russian side will at least try to achieve the preservation of some number of people – to justify its presence in Nagorno-Karabakh:

“The Russian leadership hopes that at least 10,000 Armenians will remain in Karabakh. This is in Azerbaijan’s interest too. Azerbaijan has to show the whole world that integration is going on, that there are no problems. These people will be forced to speak out in favor of Azerbaijan, to thank this country. That is, some number will remain in the end. In a year and a half Baku and Moscow may agree that peacekeepers will remain on a small territory where the Russian base will be located”.

Never before has there been such a wave of anti-Russian sentiment in Armenia. From time to time the Armenian authorities openly criticize Russia’s position and the inaction of the peacekeeping contingent stationed in NK. In Yerevan, in front of the Russian embassy, there are periodic protests of residents chanting “Russia is the enemy”. There is total disillusionment among the traditionally pro-Russian Armenians in NK. But despite all this, official Moscow continues to talk about “allied relations” with Armenia.

Armenia remains our ally, a close state. Armenia is a nation close to us. You know that more Armenians live in our country than in Armenia itself, much more. We will continue to fulfill our functions, we will continue the dialogue with the Armenian side, with Pashinyan among others, and we will continue to work so that all the rights of the residents of Karabakh, meaning Karabakh Armenians, are respected,” Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov commented.

Meduza has obtained a document sent from the presidential administration to Russian media outlets on September 19, at the height of hostilities in Karabakh

At the same time, statements are being made from Armenia that “the peacekeeping mission has failed to ensure the security of the inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh, as a result of which there is now a mass evacuation of people”. From Russia, all the blame is being laid at the feet the Armenian authorities. They declare that it was the Armenian Prime Minister who signed a document in Prague recognizing the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, including NK territory.

Citing this argument, Russian officials and experts consider the dispute exhausted — while Putin himself, long before the Prague agreement, had twice publicly stated that Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan.

In any case, the relations between the allies are experiencing a colossal and perhaps unprecedented crisis. Pashinyan has in fact openly accused Russia of interfering in the country’s internal affairs — in connection with the protests in Yerevan demanding his resignation. And in the Armenian society, following the expert circles, the talk about the necessity of Armenia’s withdrawal from the Russian military bloc CSTO became more frequent.

Will Russia leave Armenia and Karabakh? Much in this issue will depend on the Ukrainian crisis, political scientist Artur Khachikyan believes:

After the Cold War, the world had a chance to build a unified security architecture. But it did not happen. And we are now standing on the threshold of possibly several regional conflicts. And against this background, the ethnic cleansing of 120,000 people [in Nagorno-Karabakh] is viewed with indifference by all sides.”

In an interview with POLITICO, the Armenian Prime Minister talked about expectations from the mediators of negotiations with Azerbaijan, as well as his intention to establish relations with neighbors on his own

Armenian politicians have refrained from answering the question of what will happen to Karabakh in the very near future. And neither the incumbent authorities nor the opposition. In the streets of Yerevan, where protests have been taking place for about two weeks now, Nagorno-Karabakh is the main topic. However, what the opposition is going to do in case it comes to power regarding Nagorno-Karabakh is not announced and remains unclear.

Eduard Sharmazanov, a former member of the Armenian parliament and a member of the Republican Party, actually says that “Artsakh has already been lost” and now we need to think about how not to lose Armenia:

The time for action has come for the state-minded citizens of the country. It depends on us whether Armenia will be independent or turn into a Turkish vilayet. You are all talking about Artsakh now, but it is not only Artsakh that is in danger. Armenia’s independence, sovereignty and security are at risk.”

While the opposition is trying to achieve a change of power through street fighting and Pashinyan’s party is trying to defend that very power, the number of displaced people from Karabakh is rapidly growing in southern Armenia. The government has to solve the issues of supplying and providing housing for tens of thousands of people.

Brussels, Paris and Washington have already announced their decision to provide financial assistance to Yerevan. But the responsibility for those arriving falls on the acting government.

People interviewed on the streets of Yerevan say:

The authorities are obliged to do everything to receive all our compatriots with dignity.

Both the state and the people are obliged to receive the Karabakhis well. After all, they are Armenians, with Armenian passports. And the state is obliged to protect its citizens.

Of course, people are tense now, to put it mildly. They have been through so much. But we still have to welcome everyone with open arms.

Author – Huseyn Ismailbeyli

On January 1, 2024, there will be no de facto separatist regime in Karabakh. After more than 32 years, the oldest interethnic conflict in the post-Soviet space – the Karabakh conflict – will come to an end.

What will happen next? Will any part of Armenians remain in Karabakh? How will they live as part of Azerbaijan?

These are the most pressing questions in Azerbaijan now.

“Thirty years have been stolen. Both from us and from themselves. What did they get? Although we lived in the center of Baku, Ganja, Sumgait, Mingechevir and other well-appointed cities of Azerbaijan. Even in my native Lankaran, where Armenians could be counted on the fingers of one hand, the director of the most popular school was an Armenian.

In 1988, I served for 5 months in Stepanakert, in the infamous 366th regiment. All the signs in the city were in two languages: Russian and Armenian. Everything sold in the stores, from butter to cigarettes, was made in Armenia. It did not feel that this city was part of Azerbaijan. Until you went up to Shusha. But it was not enough for you.

You stole 30 years. Thousands of lives. Both from us and from yourselves. Though it’s hard to find a more compliant people than the Azeris. You could live here as long as you want without encroaching on the land. By God, you would earn more from oil and gas than we do. But you became victims of your myths.

What happens after? Sit and think about it. Will you once again decide to steal both our years and lives, or will we learn to live side by side in a human way?” – former political prisoner, historian Yadigar Sadigli addresses Armenians.

“Undoubtedly, this is an historic event,” independent politician Azer Gasimli says.

In his opinion, the main reason is that Russia changed its position:

“If with Russia’s support in the early 90s of the last century Armenians managed to proclaim a separatist entity on the territory of Azerbaijan and occupy seven adjacent districts, now Moscow preferred to stay on the side and not interfere.

Russia’s goal here is once again to continue to control both South Caucasus countries. To do this, it needs to oust Pashinyan in Yerevan and bring a loyal politician to power. And in Azerbaijan it is going to keep its troops. Right now it is the RCC.”

Political observer Shahin Jafarli says that after the latest fighting, “another important step has been taken in bringing the territory where Russian peacekeepers are temporarily stationed back under Azerbaijani control.”

“Meetings are being held between representatives of official Baku and the Karabakh Armenian community to discuss the conditions for the reintegration of the region’s Armenian population into Azerbaijani society. These meetings mainly discuss humanitarian issues, but they show that the Karabakh Armenians already recognize Azerbaijan’s sovereign rights over the region. These are all, of course, very important developments.”

“There is no doubt that Baku has agreed with Moscow to carry out a counter-terrorist operation. It is understandable that in such matters there is bargaining between the parties. Personally, I am concerned about what was promised to Moscow?

Perhaps Azerbaijan agreed to the stay of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Karabakh even after 2025. Certainly, Russia does not want to leave the region. And from this point of view, official Baku could have taken such a step.

Either the RCC will remain as a security guarantor for those Armenians who decide to stay in Karabakh, or it has been agreed that the RCC will be transformed into a temporary Russian military base in Azerbaijan. These questions are still open. We will find out the answers to them as events unfold,” Jafarli suggests.

Azer Gasimli is almost of the same opinion with him:

“I am interested in only one question in this case: what did Azerbaijan promise in return for the fact that Russia only observed what was going on?”

Karabakh’s Armenian population is leaving the region en masse and heading to Armenia

After the counter-terrorist operation of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces on September 19-20, a mass exodus of the Armenian population of Karabakh to Armenia began. According to Armenian sources, so far 100,000 people have left Karabakh.

In Azerbaijan these figures are treated with great skepticism. Anyone who knows elementary arithmetic, on the basis of the figures published by the Armenian side, can count and come to the conclusion that every minute about 16 people cross the border between Azerbaijan and Armenia at the Lachin checkpoint. Taking into account the fact that there is only one registration window at the checkpoint, and all those leaving the country must be registered, this is practically impossible.

According to former Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Tofig Zulfugarov, according to the last census in the Soviet years, 127,000 Armenians and 32,000 Azerbaijanis lived in the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region.

“Before the war started in 2020, according to some estimates, about 60,000 people lived in Karabakh. The majority of this population were military personnel. These are both the Armenian Armed Forces and those who served there. About 30,000 servicemen. In fact, the occupied territories of Azerbaijan turned into a military camp.

After the 2020 war, most of the population left Karabakh, but then some of them returned. The Azerbaijani side, through a visual survey, found that about 24,000 people had returned. Russian peacekeepers called the figure about 50,000. It was assumed that together with the military and their families, about 40,000 people lived in that part of Karabakh,” Zulfugarov told JAMnews.

“Today it is quite difficult to say how many Armenians will remain in Karabakh. I assume that in the best case it will be a figure of 5 -10,000,” he added.

An Azerbaijani police vehicle in Khankendi (Stepanakert). Photo: social networks

“The process of Armenians leaving Karabakh for Armenia is of interest. In fact, Russia should not be interested in this. In order to prolong the RCC’s stay in Karabakh, it is important for Russians that Armenians remain in the region.

This leads some political analysts to believe that the Kremlin is trying to capitalize on the protest mood of Karabakh Armenians to overthrow the Pashinyan government in Armenia. But in general, of course, Russia should be interested in keeping some Armenians in Karabakh.

In my opinion, at least a few thousand Armenians will still remain in Khankendi,” political observer Shahin Jafarli said in conversation with us.

“I believe that approximately several tens of thousands of Armenians will remain in Karabakh. Russia will do everything in its power to keep a certain share of Armenians,” independent politician Azer Gasimli echoes the observer’s thoughts.

Expert Shahin Rzayev spoke about the possibility of reintegration of Karabakh Armenians into Azerbaijani society

According to the November 10, 2020 trilateral statement that put an end to the second Karabakh war, Russian peacekeepers will remain in Karabakh until November 2025. Unless one of the parties (Azerbaijan and Armenia) withdraws from this agreement six months before the expiration of this term, the RCC’s stay in Karabakh is automatically extended for another 5 years.

Because of the events in Karabakh, many in Azerbaijan are wondering: what will become of the Russian peacekeepers? Will they leave or will they stay?

“There are still unresolved questions. First of all, they concern the role that Russian peacekeepers should play in the region after what happened. And of course, the question of their term of stay in Karabakh.

There is no doubt that the peacekeepers will remain in Karabakh until November 10, 2025, since in 2020 the term of their stay is set at 5 years. The main thing here is what Azerbaijan and Russia have agreed on behind the scenes,” says Shahin Jafarli.

“Except for the Lachin road, almost all the posts of the Russian peacekeepers have lost their importance” – noted Azerbaijani political scientist

From January 1, 2024, the unrecognized NKR must cease to exist. But is it that simple?

“I think, first of all, official Baku will establish a special management regime there, as the territory is militarized, there is still a lot of work to be done there to clear mines, etc. Only after that there will be ordinary governance, as in other regions of Azerbaijan,” Tofig Zulfugarli believes.

Shahin Jafarli thinks that everything will be resolved with the passage of time:

“Regarding the problem of future cohabitation of Armenians and Azerbaijanis in Karabakh, the solution of humanitarian issues, it all takes time. One cannot think that all issues of Armenian life in Azerbaijani society will be solved overnight. This includes the curriculum in schools, the issue of service in the army, employment, etc.

At first, I admit that Armenians will be actively involved in the system of self-government in Khankendi. Perhaps in the form of a municipality operating within the framework of Azerbaijani legislation. It is quite possible that Baku will appoint one of the loyal Armenians as the head of the executive power of Khankendi. All this requires a little time.”

Azer Gasimli has completely different predictions about the near future in Karabakh:

“According to my assumptions, the Kremlin will try to leave the separatist regime in Khankendi at least in some form. Let’s say, in the form of a mini-model. Therefore, almost all Armenians who decided to stay in Karabakh will be placed in Khankendi. The forces of the RCC will also be focused there, and perhaps the Azerbaijani security forces will not be allowed there.

Maybe formally the flag of Azerbaijan will be flying there, a representative of official Baku will sit there. But there will be no control over the city as such”.

Talking to Deutsche Welle, Hikmet Hajiyev said that the relocation of Armenians from Karabakh is “a personal and individual decision” of the residents

“One of the fears of Armenian society in Armenia itself is the likelihood of a continuation of the confrontation between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Zangezur corridor.

I think that this issue is no longer as pressing as it was a few months ago. Yerevan’s position is obvious — it does not want the extraterritorial status of the road that will connect the western regions of Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan. Iran also opposes such a scenario. And, probably, this plan will have to be reconsidered, since there can no longer be a corridor as such.

But in the light of recent events in Armenia, the most interested party in opening the Zangezur corridor is Russia. Russia is trying its best to push through this extraterritorial project in Armenia. As is known, according to the terms of the trilateral statement of November 10, 2020, the corridor should be under the control of Russian special services, and this factor can raise the importance of Russia in Armenia, which has been seriously shaken recently. But Russia cannot ignore Iran’s position on this issue, as Tehran is an important ally of Moscow. Therefore, I believe that the probability of opening the extraterritorial Zangazer corridor has significantly decreased,” Shahin Jafarli told JAMnews.

Ruben Vardanyan, former State Minister of the unrecognized NKR, sentenced to 4 months’ imprisonment for the period of investigation

One of the fears of Armenians when it comes to the possibility of living in Azerbaijan is the anti-democratic regime in the country. The arrest of oppositionists, activists, lack of freedom of speech and _expression_ are cited as arguments.

Political observer Shahin Jafarli is not so categorical on this issue:

“The argument of Armenians that the anti-democratic regime in Azerbaijan treats its citizens rather harshly is used as propaganda. Mainly by the Armenian Diaspora in different countries.

I do not consider this argument to be valid. Suppose tomorrow there is a change of power in Azerbaijan, and the power is transferred to the opposition, let’s imagine the Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan. What will change in this case with regard to the Armenian population?

Everyone knows that they have an even tougher stance towards the Armenian population of Karabakh than the authorities. In other words, the democratization of society in Azerbaijan is not yet a decisive factor in this issue.

And if we talk about a change in the internal policy of the Azerbaijani authorities after the reintegration of Armenians, I don’t think this will happen. Yes, the authorities will pursue a softer policy towards the Armenian population. But I don’t think there will be any change in the behavior of the authorities towards the traditional opposition.”

“I don’t think the conflict is over. It has only changed its form, moved to another plane.

The conflict will end only when the Russian troops leave Azerbaijan and the powers that be come to a consensus on the Karabakh issue and recognize Karabakh as an integral part of Azerbaijan,” politician Azer Gasimli concluded.