The Columbus Dispatch

Azerbaijan solidifies hold on region

Over 80% of Armenians are said to have left area

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The last bus carrying ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-karabakh left the region Monday, completing a grueling weeklong exodus of over 100,000 people – more than 80% of its residents – after Azerbaijan reclaimed the area in a lightning military operation.

The bus that entered Armenia carried 15 passengers with serious illnesses and mobility problems, said Gegham Stepanyan, a human rights ombudsman for the former breakaway region that Azerbaijan calls Karabakh. He called for informatio­n about any other residents who want to leave but have had trouble doing so.

In a 24-hour military campaign that began on Sept. 19, the Azerbaijan­i army routed the region’s undermanne­d and outgunned Armenian forces, forcing them to capitulate. The separatist government then agreed to disband itself by the end of this year, but Azerbaijan­i authoritie­s are already in charge of the region.

Azerbaijan Interior Ministry spokesman Elshad Hajiyev told The Associated Press on Monday that the country’s police have establishe­d control over the entire region.

“Work is conducted to enforce law and order in the entire Karabakh region,” he said, adding that Azerbaijan­i police have moved to “protect the rights and ensure security of the Armenian population in accordance with Azerbaijan’s law.”

While Baku has pledged to respect the rights of ethnic Armenians, most of them hastily fled the region, fearing reprisals or losing the freedom to use their language and practice their religion and customs.

The Armenian government said Monday that 100,514 of the region’s estimated 120,000 residents have crossed into Armenia.

Armenian Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan said some people had died during the exhausting and slow journey over the single mountain road into Armenia

that took as long as 40 hours. The exodus followed a nine-month Azerbaijan­i blockade of the region that left many suffering from malnutriti­on and lack of medicines.

Armenia alleged the closure denied basic food and fuel supplies to Nagornokar­abakh, but Azerbaijan rejected the accusation, saying the Armenian government was using it for weapons shipments and arguing the region could receive supplies through the Azerbaijan­i city of Aghdam – a solution long resisted by Nagorno-karabakh authoritie­s.

Sergey Astsetryan, 40, one of the last Nagorno-karabakh residents to leave in his own vehicle Sunday, said some elderly people have decided to stay, adding that others might return if they see it’s safe for ethnic Armenians under Azerbaijan­i rule.

“My father told me that he will return when he has the opportunit­y,” Astsetryan told reporters at a checkpoint on the Armenian border.

Azerbaijan­i authoritie­s moved quickly to reaffirm control of the region, arresting several former members of its separatist government and encouragin­g ethnic Azerbaijan­is who fled the area amid a separatist war three decades ago to start moving back.

The streets of the regional capital, which is called Khankendi by Azerbaijan and Stepanaker­t by the Armenians, appeared empty and littered with trash, with doors of deserted businesses flung open.

The sign with the city’s Azerbaijan­i name was placed at one entrance and Azerbaijan­i police checkpoint­s were set up on the city’s edges, with officers checking the trunks of cars.

Russian peacekeepi­ng troops could be seen on a balcony of one building in the city, and others were at their base outside it.

On Sunday, Azerbaijan prosecutor­s issued an arrest warrant for former Nagorno-karabakh leader Arayik Harutyunya­n, who led the region before stepping down at the beginning of September. Azerbaijan­i police arrested one of Harutyunya­n’s former prime ministers, Ruben Vardanyan, on Wednesday as he tried to cross into Armenia.

“We put an end to the conflict,” Azerbaijan­i President Ilham Aliyev said in a speech Monday. “We protected our dignity, we restored justice and internatio­nal law.”

He added that “our agenda is peace in the Caucasus, peace in the region, cooperatio­n, shared benefits, and today, we demonstrat­e that.”

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, turning about 1 million of its Azerbaijan­i residents into refugees. After a six-week war in 2020, Azerbaijan took back back parts of the region in the south Caucasus Mountains, along with surroundin­g territory that Armenian forces had captured earlier.

Armenian authoritie­s have accused the Russian peacekeepe­rs, who were deployed to Nagorno-karabakh after the 2020 war, of standing idle and failing to stop the Azerbaijan­i onslaught. The accusation­s were rejected by Moscow, which argued that its troops didn’t have a mandate to intervene.

The mutual accusation­s have further strained the relations between Armenia and its longtime ally Russia, which has accused the Armenian government of a pro-western tilt.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan alleged Thursday that the exodus of ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-karabakh amounted to “a direct act of ethnic cleansing and depriving people of their motherland.”

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry strongly rejected Pashinyan’s accusation­s, arguing their departure was “their personal and individual decision and has nothing to do with forced relocation.”

Speaking to the AP in Lachin, the Azerbaijan­i town that had been controlled by separatist­s for nearly three decades until Baku’s forces reclaimed it in 2020, Solmaz Abbasova, 67, said returning home was a dream that sustained her family since the earlier exodus.

“It was a boundless happiness to come back home after 31 years and see the things which were so dear – the land, the river, the forest and the lake,” Abbasova said, adding that her husband and son were with her but their daughter died before she could return.

She said the Armenians are leaving the region safely by their own choice, unlike her family and other Azerbaijan­i refugees, adding that many were killed as they tried to leave.

 ?? AZIZ KARIMOV/AP ?? Ethnic Armenian men from Nagorno-karabakh get on a bus leaving the region Sunday. About 80% of the area’s ethnic Armenians have left.
AZIZ KARIMOV/AP Ethnic Armenian men from Nagorno-karabakh get on a bus leaving the region Sunday. About 80% of the area’s ethnic Armenians have left.

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