Armenia claims Azerbaijan is intent on ethnic cleansing

The Saturday Paper, Australia
Sept 30 2023


Great power rivalry

Ukraine: Russia and Ukraine engaged in fierce drone attacks this week after Ukraine claimed it had killed one of Russia’s most senior naval commanders in a strike in Crimea that left 34 officers dead.

Ukraine’s special forces on Monday said its attack had destroyed the headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea fleet during a meeting of officers that included the head of the fleet, Admiral Viktor Sokolov, who had held the post since September last year. On Tuesday, Russia’s defence ministry released footage it said showed Sokolov at a meeting of defence leaders that day. The Kremlin said the defence ministry had not provided any information about Sokolov’s alleged death.

Russia this week launched a barrage of missile, drone and artillery strikes, including attacks that destroyed grain infrastructure in the ports of Odesa and Izmail. Six people died in the attacks. Russia claimed it had shot down Ukrainian drones over Crimea and two regions in Russia.

Separately, a United Nations investigation reported this week that it found torture and rape by Russian forces in Ukraine had been “widespread and systematic”.

Erik Mose, who headed the investigation, told a hearing at the UN Human Rights Council that “frequently, family members were kept in an adjacent room, thereby forced to hear the violations taking place”.

Russia did not send a representative to the hearing.


United States: Joe Biden hosted a two-day summit with leaders from the Pacific Islands in Washington this week as part of a bid to counter China’s growing reach in the region.

The gathering, which followed a similar summit hosted by the US president last year, included representatives from 18 Pacific nations.

The prime minister of Solomon Islands, Manasseh Sogavare, who has been forging close ties with Beijing, did not attend, even though he had just been in New York for the UN General Assembly. Officials in Solomon Islands claimed Sogavare, who visited China in July, had to return home for parliamentary business. A White House official said the US was “disappointed” at Sogavare’s absence.

In his address to the UN, Sogavare said China’s development cooperation was “less restrictive, more responsive and aligned to our national needs”. He also criticised the region’s “toxic mix of geopolitical power posturing”.

The other notable absence from the summit was Vanuatu’s new prime minister, Sato Kilman, who stayed in Port Vila to try to retain his shaky hold on power.

Pacific leaders have criticised the geopolitical rivalry in the region, saying their main priority is climate change.

On Monday, Biden told the summit he accepted concerns in the Pacific about the existential threat of rising sea levels. He promised US$200 million to support climate change mitigation, economic development and public health projects, and to combat illegal fishing.

“We hear your calls for reassurance that you never, never, never will lose your statehood or membership of the UN as a result of a climate crisis,” he said.

The White House, which has been opening embassies across the region, said it would establish diplomatic recognition of Niue, which has just 2000 residents, and of Cook Islands, which has about 8000 residents and is a self-governing nation in free association with New Zealand.

Azerbaijan: Armenia accused Azerbaijan of conducting ethnic cleansing in the disputed Nagorno–Karabakh region this week after Azerbaijani forces reclaimed control of the enclave, prompting a mass exodus of ethnic Armenians.

Azerbaijan has been blockading the tiny territory for months, preventing food and medicine from entering and raising concerns about a potential genocide. The enclave, which is inside Azerbaijan and is internationally recognised as belonging to Azerbaijan, has an ethnic Armenian majority, which had formed a breakaway government.

Last Sunday, Azerbaijan launched a successful 24-hour offensive that forced the breakaway government to agree to a ceasefire and to dismantle its armed forces. The enclave is now set to be reintegrated into Azerbaijan. Armenia said the operation left 200 people dead and 400 wounded.

By Tuesday, more than 28,000 ethnic Armenians from Nagorno–Karabakh – or almost a quarter of the population – had fled to Armenia, due to fear of reprisals. At least 68 people waiting for fuel to flee the enclave were killed and 300 were injured when a fuel storage depot exploded on Tuesday, though the cause was unknown.

Representatives of the breakaway state this week called for the United Nations to oversee security in the enclave.

David Babayan, an official, told Reuters “99.9 per cent prefer to leave our historic lands”.

The area covered by the sea ice that surrounds Antarctica has hit a record low after failing to recover during winter.

The US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) revealed on Monday that the area covered by sea ice after the recent winter peaked on September 10 at 16.96 million square kilometres – about a million square kilometres less than the previous record low in 1986. Of the eight lowest amounts on record, four have occurred since 2018.

The sea ice is crucial to protect the continent’s glaciers and ice and to help prevent further rises in ocean temperatures.

Some of the reduction in sea ice this winter was caused by storms that pushed sea ice against the landmass, but the bulk of the loss could not be explained by seasonal weather. According to the NSIDC, the sea ice around Antarctica took a “sharp downturn” in 2016 that has steadily continued and is believed to be due to warmer ocean temperatures.

“There is some concern that this may be the beginning of a long-term trend of decline for Antarctic sea ice, since oceans are warming globally, and warm water mixing in the Southern Ocean polar layer could continue,” the centre said in a statement.

Antarctica and the Arctic are both believed to be warming at faster rates than the rest of the world, causing environmental havoc. Late last year, melting sea ice in Antarctica caused the mass wipeout of emperor penguin chicks, which drowned or froze because they had not yet developed the feathers required to swim. About 10,000 young penguins died.

Gail Whiteman, of the University of Exeter in Britain, told The Washington Post the latest sea ice data from Antarctica was “not great news”.

“Polar ice is one of the world’s biggest insurance policies against runaway climate change, and we can see in both the North and the South sea ice, we’ve got problems and alarm bells are ringing,” she said. 

The End of Nagorno-Karabakh

Sept 30 2023

An illustration of Alexandra Sharp, World Brief newsletter writerAlexandra Sharp
By Alexandra Sharp

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

We turn now to Armenia, which continues to see refugees from the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan pour across the border. The ethnic Armenian enclave declared independence from Azerbaijan in the waning days of the Soviet Union and has been the scene of conflict ever since. An attack by Azerbaijani forces earlier this month led to the capitulation of the Nagorno-Karabakh government and the exit of most of the enclave's Armenian population.

NPR's Peter Kenyon is now in the Armenian capital of Yerevan and joins us now. Hi, Peter.

PETER KENYON, BYLINE: Hi, Ailsa.

CHANG: So what are you seeing and hearing there? What are people saying?

KENYON: Well, many people are unhappy with the government's handling of this whole situation. Some people are saying they feel abandoned. Things, though, have gotten a bit quieter recently. There were these mass demonstrations here in Yerevan. Now things are sort of quieting down in the last couple of days. Revolutionary Square (ph) was busy tonight, but not anything like a demonstration, except for one very small group calling for universal peace.

There are also relief efforts going on. I came across a group of young volunteers offering food and soft drinks that they say were donated by communities from around the country. Fifteen-year-old Harcun says he felt he had to do something, and he found some others feeling the same way. Here's how he put it.

HARCUN: I'm not alone. I'm with my friend, and I know almost everyone from here. I'm here to help my country, people from my country who are in trouble.

KENYON: Now, there are similar efforts going on here and bigger ones down at the border. And people seem to be gravitating towards attempts big and small aimed at helping others. How long that might last is hard to predict.

CHANG: Well, now that the Armenian government in Nagorno-Karabakh has said it will dissolve itself and cease to exist, basically, what does that mean for the future?

KENYON: Well, people are saying it appears Armenians who do stay in Nagorno-Karabakh would have no choice but to live under Azerbaijani rule. And Baku has said it's ready to govern fairly, but after so many years of mistrust and tension, serious doubts linger. People here in Armenia find it hard to believe that large numbers of ethnic Armenians would take that offer seriously. And of course, Azerbaijan has its grievances as well. In the early '90s, when the ethnic Armenians established this enclave in Nagorno-Karabakh, thousands of Azerbaijanis were killed or displaced.

Now, people here in Armenia say they expect most ethnic Armenians to make the journey to Armenia, some for the first time, most likely. The numbers have continued to rise day by day. The government here says more than 97,000 refugees have crossed out of Nagorno-Karabakh so far, and that's in an enclave that was estimated to hold about 120,000 ethnic Armenians in total.

CHANG: Well, what could all of this mean for the government there in Yerevan?

KENYON: That is also a big common theme among people I've talked to here. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is blamed for mishandling the situation. His traditional ally, Russia, did nothing to stop the Azerbaijani attack, and that had been seen as shocking to some. They thought of it as an alliance stretching all the way back to the days of what historians call the 1915 Armenian Genocide at the hands of Ottoman forces.

But beyond that, Western countries also failed to come to Pashinyan's aid, and people here are wondering where their leaders will turn to chart a path forward. Some wonder if the Armenian prime minister has much of a political future left. But few here seem to be relishing an internal political fight in Armenia right now, saying that hardly seems likely to contribute to healing scars and getting past the events of recent days.

CHANG: That is NPR's Peter Kenyon in Yerevan, Armenia. Thank you so much, Peter.

KENYON: Thanks, Ailsa.

https://www.npr.org/2023/09/29/1202745335/protests-roil-in-armenia-following-military-takeover-of-ethnic-enclave-in-azerba

Armenia sues Azerbaijan in International Court of Justice

The Kyiv Independent
Sept 30 2023
by Abbey Fenbert 

Armenia has filed a lawsuit against Azerbaijan in the International Court of Justice (ICJ), according to a press release from The Hague published Sept. 29.

The request calls on the court to uphold the rights protected under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD).

Armenia's suit asks the ICJ to impose new demands on Azerbaijan in addition to reinforcing its obligations under previous orders.

The new demands include the complete withdrawal of military and law enforcement personnel from civilian establishments in Nagorno-Karabakh and the facilitation of humanitarian aid deliveries to ethnic Armenians in the region.

It also calls on Azerbaijan to "refrain from taking any actions directly or indirectly aimed at…displacing the remaining ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh."

On Sept. 19, Azerbaijan launched a military offensive against the ethnically Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh. After a day of fighting, authorities in the capital of Stepanakert (Khankendi in Azerbaijani) agreed to accept a ceasefire on Sept. 20 mediated by Russia.

Yerevan denounced the offensive as part of a policy of "ethnic cleansing."

On Oct. 5, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev will meet in Spain to hold talks along with French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, and European Council President Charles Michel.

Israeli weapons are killing peaceful civilians, Armenian envoy tells ‘Post’

Jerusalem Post
Sept 30 2023
By MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN

On September 19, Azerbaijan initiated a significant “anti-terrorist operation” in Nagorno-Karabakh. The conflict lasted only 24 hours, but Azerbaijan achieved its goal: The local defense forces surrendered and agreed to engage in discussions regarding potential integration.

Five days later, Baku opened the Lachin Corridor that links Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and thousands of residents of Armenian descent fled to Armenia for refuge and are unlikely to return.

In an interview with The Jerusalem Post, Armenia’s ambassador to Israel, Arman Akopian, said Azerbaijan has been using Israeli weapons to maintain its power over Nagorno-Karabakh, including against civilians.


In an earlier interview, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Israel, Mukhtar Mammadov, told the Post that the Armenians have been smuggling weapons into the region that would eventually be used against his country. He also said that Azerbaijan is not forcing anyone to leave Karabakh but would like to integrate the residents into Azerbaijan.

Meanwhile, representatives of Armenia and Azerbaijan are meeting to reach a final peace agreement. The Post spoke to Akopian over the weekend to discuss how his country views the situation.

This interview has been modified only for length and clarity.

Ambassador Arman Akopian: What is going on is classic ethnic cleaning. We see the indigenous population of the region of Armenia, people who were there for 3,000 years, leaving their homes and their spiritual and national heritage behind, leaving the graves of their loved ones behind. 


They have no choice but to leave Nagorno-Karabakh because their lives are unbearable. Just a week ago, 120,000 Armenians lived there. Today, about 100,000 have already left.


The official number of people who left is 95,000. Do you believe there were 95,000 military in that region? You can see the videos on TV: Women and children are being expelled because they see no future there. There is no guarantee for their lives. Even the Azeri people do not have guarantees because they live under an autocracy. How can the rights of the Armenians be guaranteed?

[Azerbaijan considers itself a democracy, with free elections and three branches of government operating independently: legislative, executive and judicial. However, some political analysts often characterize the country as authoritarian for its lack of genuinely democratic elections and a significant concentration of power in the hands of President Ilham Aliyev and his extended family.]

These were self-defense forces to protect local Armenians against the Azeris. There were two wars [in 1990 and 2020], and the people's safety was not guaranteed. Any community has a right to protect itself. Who else would have protected them?

Azerbaijan claims these units were part of the regular army of the Republic of Armenia. It is a lie. There are no standard army units of the Republic of Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh. 

I would not, no. It does not make sense to compare conflicts. Each conflict is unique. 

Any war ends with peace, and we remain optimistic that we will reach an agreement. But under the current conditions, when Armenians are expelled from their ancestral homeland, [it is hard to foresee]. I hope this meeting [between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on October 5] will take place because there is no other alternative but to sit at the table and talk.


I don't believe Israel has Armenia on its agenda. We have seen a lot of military cooperation: Azerbaijan buying Israeli weapons worth billions of dollars, and there is cooperation on military defense and intelligence. Iran, of course, is a factor in that. I would not say Israel is 'pro,' but cooperation is very strong, and the strategic partnership is very strong. Every time there is an escalation in our region, from the second war in 2020 until September 19, we know that Azerbaijan's Silk Way Airlines is making frequent flights to Israel to import weapons. Before this last escalation, a flight went directly from Israel to the city of Ganja, situated just north of Nagorno-Karabakh.

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Any country can sell and buy weapons. The issue is that these weapons end up on our borders and are fired at peaceful civilians. 

So, if you ask whether Israel is pro-Azerbaijan, I cannot answer. But the countries' strategic, military and intelligence cooperation is strong, and it is no secret. It is something both sides declare with pride. 

No. The civil society is very pro-Armenia in the case of Nagorno-Karabakh and recognition of the Armenian genocide. 

[Israel has yet to recognize the Armenian genocide officially.]

We can find parallels. Armenians and Jews have so many things in common. We are two peoples who suffered terrible genocides: the Armenians during WWI and the Jews in WWII. 

Raphael Lemkin, creator of the world' genocide,' referred to both the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust in parallel in an interview with CBS. 


We are witnessing a terrible human tragedy unprecedented in the 21st Century. Armenians are being forced out of their historic homeland, leaving their heritage, churches, monasteries, and tombstones behind. I see no hope for them. As long as Azerbaijan remains an autocracy, we will continue to witness this tragedy.

I am also thankful to all the Israelis who call the embassy, write open letters, and place ads in local papers supporting the Armenians. I am grateful for all the goodwill and support. 


After Nagorno-Karabakh offensive, can Turkey play nice with Armenia?

Sept 30 2023
Following Azerbaijani victory in Nagorno Karabakh, Turkey is now laying the foundations for a rapprochement with Yerevan.
Barin Kayaoglu

While publicly supporting Azerbaijan's 24-hour offensive into the Armenian-occupied portions of Karabakh, Turkey’s long-term interests and the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan might be developing a more constructive approach to Armenia.

Ankara's top geo-political interests in the region include establishing diplomatic relations with Armenia, setting up direct trade routes to Azerbaijan and other Central Asian Turkic republics, and reducing Western and Russian influence in the Southern Caucasus by increasing its own footprint. 

Beyond the short- and medium-term geopolitical benefits, better relations with Armenia could bolster Ankara’s global prestige. Turkish sources who spoke to Al-Monitor on the condition of anonymity, describe the ongoing normalization as “a once-in-a-lifetime, historic opportunity.” 

Much of impetus for the normalization talks comes from Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s domestic reform agenda and his desire to move Armenia from the Russian sphere of influence and toward the West. 

The Erdogan government believes better relations with Armenia are as important as upholding the needs of Azerbaijan — possibly Turkey’s closest regional ally — as well as its own geopolitical interests. 

Ankara’s other geopolitical interest is establishing a so-called “Zangezour corridor” that would link mainland Azerbaijan to its exclave of Nakhchivan, which is landlocked between Armenia, Turkey, and Iran. 

Zangezour corridor

The corridor would open a shorter and more secure land route from Turkey to Azerbaijan as the Turkish government seeks to deepen its trade and political ties with Azerbaijan and Turkic Central Asian republics. Both Ankara and Baku are trying to get Armenia to open the corridor. 

Ankara might also want to play nice with Armenia in order to limit Russian, Iranian, and even Western meddling in the South Caucasus. 

While Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has limited its influence, Iran is another matter. During and after the 2020 war between Azerbaijan and Armenia — which resulted in Baku’s recapturing of Armenian-occupied Nagorno-Karabakh regions — Iran sided with Armenia out of concern that a stronger Azerbaijan might trigger secessionist sentiments among Tehran’s own Azerbaijani minority. 

Tehran has opposed the Zangezour corridor projects, fearing that it would close off Tehran’s land links to Russia via Armenia and Georgia.  Ankara will likely work to sweeten the deal by offering expanded logistical access to Iran through Armenia as well as Azerbaijan. Earlier this week, Erdogan said Iran was now signaling “positive” messages over the corridor plans.  

Similarly, Turkey does not want France or the United States to gain prominence in the Armenia-Azerbaijan dispute. Until the 2020 war, France and the United States were members of the so-called Minsk Group, which was set up to mediate a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Both Western nations, however, were perceived as favoring Yerevan due to their large number of citizens of Armenian origin. The Azerbaijani victory in 2020 meant that their services were no longer needed. 

Ankara wishes to limit Washington’s footprint in the Caucasus due to US military action in neighboring Iraq and Syria that has worsened Ankara’s security outlook. Turkey also wishes to keep its NATO ally, at arm’s length in order not to avoid countermoves from Russia and Iran, complicating Turkish plans toward the south Caucasus and Central Asia.

Better relations critical 

Several Turkish bureaucratic sources emphasized to Al-Monitor the critical need to rebuild relations with Armenia, and Erdogan and his cabinet ministers are following through. Since 2021, Erdogan has begun negotiations with Pashinyan through one of his most trusted foreign policy hands, Serdar Kilic, a career diplomat whose previous posting was as Turkey’s ambassador to the United States. 

Last June, in a first for a Turkish president, Erdogan invited Pashinyan to his swearing-in ceremony and held a phone call with him on Sept. 11. Ankara’s engagement with Yerevan has continued since the latest Karabakh war.

On Wednesday Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan held a phone conversation.

One source even painted a near-fantastical picture on how a Turkish-Azerbaijani-Armenian peace could be “sold” to the citizens of the three countries. Erdogan would be joined by Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev near Mount Ararat or another location of historic and cultural importance and embrace, signal to the world that they were leaving their nations’ troublesome past behind. 

Coming from Turkish national security bureaucrats, who are traditionally skeptical toward the Armenian government and diaspora due to dark history in the 1970s and 1980s, visualizing such an image showed that the thinking of some in Ankara is changing.

Both sides have legitimate historic grievances in the Armenia-Azerbaijan dispute. During World War I, hundreds of thousands of Armenian citizens of the Ottoman Empire were forcibly deported or killed. Many others converted to Islam to save their lives in an episode known as “Mets Yeghern” (Great Catastrophe), which many scholars as well as the United States and several other European powers recognize as a genocide. 

Turkey, however, sees the deportations and killings as an unfortunate result of Armenian support for the armies of Imperial Russia during the war.

The embers of those painful memories ignited the Karabakh conflict in the 1990s. The region was an autonomous territory within Azerbaijan during Soviet times, but its population was mostly Armenian. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenian forces occupied Karabakh as well as surrounding Azerbaijani lands and established a breakaway administration. 

But Azerbaijan liberated most of its lands from Armenia in the fall of 2020, including parts of Karabakh. Despite the introduction of Russian peacekeepers as part of a ceasefire in November 2020, negotiations between Baku and Yerevan failed to produce a permanent peace treaty or resolve the status of the Armenian administration in Karabakh. Thus, Azerbaijan undertook the one-day operation, which triggered a mass exodus of the area’s Armenian population.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Over 100,000 flee to Armenia [+Links]

DW – Deutsche Welle
Germany – Sept 30 2023
Most of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh have fled to Armenia since Azerbaijan launched its offensive to retake control the enclave.

More than 100,000 refugees have arrived in Armenia from Nagorno-Karabakh, Yerevan and the head of the UN refugee agency UNHCR have said. 

Azerbaijan had earlier this month launched an offensive to gain control of the region, prompting thousands of ethnic Armenians to flee in fear of persecution. 

"Many are hungry, exhausted and need immediate assistance," UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi said on social media.

"UNHCR and other humanitarian partners are stepping up their support to the Armenian authorities, but international help is very urgently required," Grandi added.

The Armenian government on Saturday put the exact figure at 100,417, out of Nagorno-Karabakh's estimated population of 120,000.

Artak Beglaryan, a former official from Nagorno-Karabakh's separatist government, said that "the last groups" of residents from the enclave were heading to Armenia on Saturday.      

"At most a few hundred persons remain, most of whom are officials, emergency services employees, volunteers, some persons with special needs," he wrote on social media. 

Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of carrying our a campaign of "ethnic cleansing" against the majority Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Baku, however, denies the claim, and has urged ethnic Armenians of the enclave to "reintegrate" into Azerbaijan. 

Yerevan has called on the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the UN's highest court, to protect Nagorno-Karabakh's inhabitants and ensure that Baku doesn't move to displace the remaining Armenians. 

A UN mission is expected to reach Nagorno-Karabakh this weekend to assess humanitarian needs there, marking the first time an international body gained access to the region in around three decades. 

https://www.dw.com/en/nagorno-karabakh-over-100000-flee-to-armenia/a-66969667

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https://www.jpost.com/international/article-761088

https://www.arabnews.com/node/2383076/world

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/09/30/nagorno-karabakh-empties-as-armenia-says-100000-have-fled-a82619

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/eye-opener-nearly-100000-people-flee-azerbaijan-for-neighboring-armenia/

https://www.france24.com/en/asia-pacific/20230930-un-mission-to-visit-nagorno-karabakh-for-first-time-in-nearly-30-years

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/9/30/more-than-80-percent-of-nagorno-karabakhs-people-have-fled-armenia-govt

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66969845

https://news.yahoo.com/more-100-000-refugees-arrive-171413205.html

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Nagorno-Karabakh: Most people have left enclave for Armenia as Azerbaijan retakes control [+Links]

Sky News
Sept 30 2023

Armenia's prime minister claims the large-scale migration amounts to "a direct act of an ethnic cleansing", while the Baku government argues the departure of the region's residents is "their personal and individual decision and has nothing to do with forced relocation".

A mass exodus of ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh has virtually emptied the breakaway territory after Azerbaijan took back control in a military operation.

More than 100,000 have now fled to Armenia from the disputed region, which had a population of around 120,000 before Baku launched the successful lightning offensive, according to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR).

The number of vehicles to cross the Hakari Bridge, which links Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh, since last week has topped 21,000.

Some families were forced to queue for days because the winding mountain road that is the only route out became jammed with traffic.

Meanwhile, Armenia has asked the EU for temporary shelters and medical supplies to cope with the influx, Italy has said.

The flight of more than 80% of Nagorno-Karabakh's population has raised questions about Azerbaijan's plans for the enclave that was internationally recognised as part of its territory, but which had been run by an ethnic Armenian breakaway state since the 1990s.

Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has claimed the large-scale evacuation amounted to "a direct act of an ethnic cleansing and depriving people of their motherland".

But Azerbaijan has rejected the accusation, arguing the mass migration by the region's residents was "their personal and individual decision and has nothing to do with forced relocation".

During three decades of conflict in the region, Azerbaijan and the separatists backed by Armenia have accused each other of targeted attacks, massacres and other atrocities, fuelling suspicion and fear on both sides.

While Azerbaijan has pledged to respect the rights of ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, many are fleeing because they do not trust the Baku government to treat them properly or guarantee their language, religion and culture.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said his "iron fist" had consigned the idea of an independent ethnic Armenian Karabakh to history.

After six years of separatist fighting ended in 1994 following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Nagorno-Karabakh came under the control of ethnic Armenian forces, backed by Armenia.

Then, during a six-week war in 2020, Azerbaijan took back parts of the region in the south Caucasus Mountains along with surrounding territory that Armenian forces had claimed earlier.

In December, Azerbaijan blocked the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, accusing the Armenian government of using it for illicit weapons shipments to the region's separatist forces.

Weakened by the blockade and with Armenia's leadership distancing itself from the conflict, ethnic Armenian forces in the region agreed to lay down arms less than 24 hours after Azerbaijan began its offensive.

Talks have begun between officials in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku and Nagorno-Karabakh's separatist authorities on "reintegrating" the region into Azerbaijan.

https://news.sky.com/story/nagorno-karabakh-most-people-have-left-enclave-for-armenia-as-azerbaijan-retakes-control-12973147

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https://www.npr.org/2023/09/30/1202828629/almost-all-ethnic-armenians-have-fled-nagorno-karabakh-in-a-mass-exodus
https://www.rfi.fr/en/europe/20230930-nagorno-karabakh-almost-empty-as-most-of-population-flees-to-armenia
https://www.newspressnow.com/news/world_news/almost-all-of-nagorno-karabakhs-people-have-left-armenias-government-says/article_1fb06d66-30eb-5780-909d-f2717c368220.html
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/azerbaijan-nagorno-karabakh-exodus-1.6983642

Armenians in Lebanon protest Azerbaijan’s offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh

Sept 29 2023
Demonstrators gathered outside the Azerbaijani embassy outside Beirut to protest the takeover of the majority Armenian enclave.

Beatrice Farhat

BEIRUT — Hundreds of Lebanese Armenians converged on Thursday outside the Azerbaijani embassy in Lebanon to protest the lighting military operation last week that resulted in Azerbaijan recapturing Nagorno-Karabakh from ethnic Armenians.

The protests quickly turned violent, with protesters hurling stones and fireworks at anti-riot police while attempting to storm the embassy in Ain Aar, east of Beirut. The security forces responded by firing tear gas to disperse the crowd. More than 20 protesters were injured in the melee, according to the official National News Agency (NNA).

Videos circulating online showed protesters burning photos of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Turkish President Recep Tayyib Erdogan, who threw his support behind last week’s offensive.

Tashnag, an official Armenian political party in Lebanon, had called for Thursday’s protest. Lebanon is home to one of the largest Armenian populations outside Armenia. In May 2000, it became the first Arab country to recognize the Armenian genocide — the massacre of more than 1.5 million ethnic Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks in the early 20th century. The Armenians in Lebanon are estimated to number between 120,000 and 150,000.

Tashnag leader Hagop Pakradounian condemned the Azerbaijani offensive against Artsakh, what Armenians call Nagorno-Karabakh, accusing Azerbaijan and Turkey of carrying out a new “genocide” against the Armenian people.

“Today we were defeated in Artsakh, but we were not defeated as a people," the NNA quoted Pakradounian as saying in a speech during the protest. “We were not defeated as an Armenian nation.”

Last Tuesday, Azerbaijan launched what it described as an “anti-terror” operation against Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh. One day after the offensive began, a Russian-mediated cease-fire was announced, whereby Azerbaijan would take control of the enclave, and the Armenian separatists would surrender their weapons.

At least 200 people were killed in the fighting, and more than 88,000 people — 70% of Nagorno-Karabakh's estimated population of 120,000 — have since fled the territory, reported UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, on Friday.

Nagorno-Karabakh, a landlocked mountainous region, is predominantly inhabited by ethnic Armenians but is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan. Armenians took control of the territory following a bloody war against Azerbaijan in the 1990s and established a separatist government in the enclave in 1994.

On Thursday, the pro-Armenian separatist government of the breakaway region announced its own dissolution. A decree issued by the region’s president, Samvel Shahramanyan, said the self-declared Republic of Artsakh would cease to exist by Jan. 1, 2024.



 https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2023/09/armenians-lebanon-protest-azerbaijans-offensive-nagorno-karabakh#ixzz8Ep4I9Qrd

‘Modern-day saviors’ protest arrest of Armenian leader

Aleteia
Sept 30 2023

John Burger - published on 09/30/23

AChristian enclave in the Caucasus is about to come to an end, as thousands of Armenians flee Nagorno-Karabakh. The self-declared Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) was annexed last week by the country that surrounds it, Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan has taken control of the territory where Armenians have lived for more than a millennium. 

As an exodus of refugees floods into Armenia, that nation’s Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, said that in the end he does not expect any Armenians to be left in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Pashinyan claimed that forces of mainly Muslim Azerbaijan have engaged in ethnic cleansing of Nagorno-Karabakh’s 120,000 ethnic Armenians. About half of them have fled the country so far. 

“Although they are promising to protect the Armenian population, no one believes them,” Dr. Tom Catena, medical director of Mother of Mercy Hospital in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan, told Aleteia.

Dr. Catena has followed events in the region since he won the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity in 2017. The prize was initiated in 2015 on behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide. 

A US native, Dr. Catena was one of the Aurora laureates and others who signed a September 29 letter condemning Azerbaijan’s arrest on Wednesday of Ruben Vardanyan, who headed the separatist government of Artsakh from November 2022 until February. Vardanyan, a co-founder of the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity, has been charged with financing terrorism.

“I’ve gotten to know Ruben over the past six years and can attest to his fine character and multitude of good deeds,” Catena told Aleteia. “Azerbaijan starts teaching hatred of Armenians from primary school, so they are putting out plenty of nonsense about Ruben.”

Western governments have urged Azerbaijan to allow international observers into Nagorno-Karabakh to monitor its treatment of the local population, but access has not yet been given, according to Vatican News. 

Vatican News also reported that the Azeri assault on the enclave resulted in destruction or damage to residential homes and a school. 

“They were bombing us hard. Children ran into the school,” said a witness. “The Azerbaijan then attacked the school using a mortar gun. Our children were injured there.”

Noticeably absent from the scene was Russia. The New York Times pointed out that Russia, Armenia’s traditional protector and ally since 1992 in a Moscow-led collective security organization, sent peacekeepers to the area in 2020 and promised to keep open the only road linking the enclave to Armenia.

“But Moscow, distracted by its war in Ukraine and eager for closer economic and political ties with Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey, did not intervene this year when Azerbaijan closed that route, cutting off supplies of food, fuel, and medicine,” The Times said. “The Kremlin ordered its peacekeepers to stand aside during last week’s lightning assault on Artsakh’s thin defenses.”

The letter signed by Aurora laureates, who include former presidents Oscar Arias of Costa Rica, Mary Robinson of Ireland, and Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico, called the arrest of Vardanyan “both outrageous and politically motivated.”

The Aurora Humanitarian Initiative seeks to empower modern-day saviors to offer life and hope to those in urgent need of humanitarian aid and to continue the cycle of giving internationally.

“Ruben Vardanyan is being held captive because of his support for the people of Nagorno-Karabakh and their right to a democratic way of life,” said the letter. “The Aurora Humanitarian Initiative to which Ruben has given so much, has for the past eight years honored and supported the work of those who fight for basic human rights, often at the risk of their own lives, all around the world. The irony is that Ruben now finds himself a victim of the same persecution as those he has sought to help as a human rights defender.”