Daily Camera (Boulder)

Azerbaijan­is who fled war look to return home, if it exists

- By Aida Sultanova and Jim Heintz

BAKU, Azerbaijan — As Azerbaijan regains control of land it lost to Armenian forces a quarter-century ago, civilians who fled the fighting decades ago wonder if they can go back home now — and if there’s still a home to go back to.

An estimated 600,000 Azerbaijan­is were displaced in the 1990s war that left the Nagorno-karabakh region under the control of ethnic Armenian separatist­s and large adjacent territorie­s in Armenia’s hands. During six weeks of renewed fighting this fall that ended Nov. 10, Azerbaijan took back parts of Nagorno-karabakh itself and sizeable swaths of the outlying areas.

More territory is being returned as part of the ceasefire agreement that stopped the latest fighting. But as Azerbaijan­i forces discovered when the first area, Aghdam, was turned over on Friday, much of the recovered land is uninhabita­ble. The city of Aghdam, where 50,000 people once lived, is now a shattered ruin.

Adil Sharifov, 62, who left his hometown in 1992 during the first war and lives in Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku, knows he will find similar devastatio­n if he returns to the city of Jabrayil, which he longs to do.

Jabrayil is one of the outlying areas regained by Azerbaijan­i troops before the recent fighting ended. Soon after it was taken, one of Sharifov’s cousins went there and told him the city was destroyed, including the large house with an orchard where Sharifov’s family once lived.

Nonetheles­s, “the day when I return there will be the greatest happiness for me,” he said.

For years, he said, his family had followed reports about Jabrayil on the internet. They knew the destructio­n was terrible, but Sharifov’s late mother retained a desperate hope that their house had been spared and held on to the keys.

“I will build an even better house,” he vowed.

Ulviya Jumayeva, 50, can go back to better, though not ideal circumstan­ces in her native Shusha, a city that Azerbaijan­i forces took in the key offensive of the sixweek war.

Her younger brother, Nasimi, took part in the battle and phoned to tell her the apartment their family fled in 1992 was intact, though mostly stripped of the family’s possession­s.

“According to him, it is clear that Armenians lived there after us, and then they took everything away. But our large mirror in the hallway, which we loved to look at as children, remains,” Jumayeva said, adding: “Maybe my grandchild­ren will look in this mirror.”

“We all have houses in Baku, but everyone considered them to be not permanent, because all these years we lived in the hope that we would return to Shusha,” she said. “Our hearts, our thoughts have always been in our hometown.”

But she acknowledg­ed that her feelings toward Armenians have become more bitter.

“My school friends were mostly Armenian. I never treated ordinary Armenians badly, believing that their criminal leaders who unleashed the war were to blame for the massacre, war, and grief that they brought to their people as well,” Jumayeva said.

“But after the current events, after the shelling of peaceful cities ... after the Armenians who are now leaving our territorie­s, which are even outside of Karabakh, burn down the houses of Azerbaijan­is in which they lived illegally ... something fractured in me. I changed my attitude toward them,” she said. “I understood that we, Azerbaijan­is, will not be able to live peacefully next to the Armenians.”

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 ?? Karen Minasyan / Getty Images ?? An Armenian man hugs his relatives upon their arrival from Yerevan to the regional capital Stepanaker­t, on Sunday, following the Russian-brokered ceasefire ending six weeks of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the selfprocla­imed republic.
Karen Minasyan / Getty Images An Armenian man hugs his relatives upon their arrival from Yerevan to the regional capital Stepanaker­t, on Sunday, following the Russian-brokered ceasefire ending six weeks of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the selfprocla­imed republic.

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