The Guardian (USA)

Thousands protest in Armenia over military strike on Nagorno-Karabakh

- Howard Amos in Yerevan

Thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of the Armenian capital after Azerbaijan launched a full-scale military assault on the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The demonstrat­ion came amid rising discontent with Armenia’s prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, the inaction of Russian peacekeepe­rs and the failure of western government­s to stop bloodshed.

The announceme­nt of a ceasefire in the disputed enclave on Wednesday appeared to involve the de facto capitulati­on of local defence forces and looked set to fuel the political unrest in Armenia, piling pressure on Pashinyan.

Protesters smashed the windows of government buildings on Yerevan’s central Republic Square late on Tuesday as they scuffled with police in an attempt to get inside.

Security officers responded by throwing stun grenades into the crowd.

“If we had good leadership, we would be able to resist what is happening,” said Sarhat Petrosyan, an architect and former member of Pashinyan’s government who was out protesting. “All these people are ready to go and fight.”

“If he [Pashinyan] can’t do anything, he should resign,” said another protester, Svetlana Abramyan, a pensioner. “He’s a coward.”

Dozens of civilians and troops were killed and wounded in the mountainou­s South Caucasus region, according to local officials, in what Baku said was an “anti-terrorist operation” to dismantle the longstandi­ng NagornoKar­abakh government and eliminate “illegal Armenian military formations”.

Azerbaijan­i officials said they had reached a ceasefire agreement involving the withdrawal of all local defence units from Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrender of arms and heavy equipment.

Many in Yerevan believe that Baku’s ultimate goal is to ethnically cleanse Nagorno-Karabakh, which is internatio­nally recognised as Azerbaijan­i territory, of its predominan­tly Armenian population estimated to number about 120,000.

“What is going on is an Armenian genocide,” said Yuri, a protester on Republic Square. “It’s a genocide in the 21st century.”

A total of 36 people were injured in a night of scuffles between police and protesters in Yerevan, according to the country’s ministry of health. Opposition groups have pledged that demonstrat­ions will continue in the coming days.

Pashinyan, who led Armenia through its defeat in the second Karabakh war three years ago, made it clear from the start of the fighting that he did not intend to authorise a military interventi­on to counter the Azerbaijan­i offensive.

As Russian peacekeepe­rs, believed to number about 2,000 soldiers, appeared either powerless or disincline­d to intervene during the 24 hours of conflict, Baku also seemed to rebuff internatio­nal calls for peace from the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, and other western diplomats.

Some senior Armenian officials have singled out Russian peacekeepe­rs for not doing more to stop the violence. “If Russia wants to stay in the region then it should take some steps to stop [ethnic cleansing and genocide]. If it doesn’t stop what is happening then the answer to the question: ‘Does Russian want to leave the region?’ can only be yes,” said the secretary of Armenia’s security council, Armen Grigoryan, according to local reports.

At the same time as the protests on Republic Square, a smaller gathering took place Tuesday night outside the Russian embassy in Yerevan.

Several hundred demonstrat­ors chanted “murderers, murderers, murderers!” and blocked Russian diplomats from entering and leaving the building.

“Russia provoked the fighting,” said Hayk Hamburbzum­yan, a programmer who was standing outside the embassy. “We want to get rid of the Russians once and for all. In 400 years, this is the first time Russia is not as strong as it was. We have an historical opportunit­y to get rid of them.”

Another protester, Mary Papoyan, said: “They don’t want to protect us, they want to control us.”

Traditiona­lly strong ties between Russia and Armenia have frayed in recent years as Moscow, mired in its own war in Ukraine, has done little to prevent Azerbaijan tightening its grip over Nagorno-Karabakh – including with a nine-month blockade that led to major food shortages.

As tensions in Nagorno-Karabakh rose, Pashinyan appeared to make overtures to the west, and Armenia is hosting a rare joint military exercise with the US.

Yerevan’s pro-western course has provoked some anger in Moscow, with the head of the state-owned network RT, Margarita Simonyan, asking mockingly on Tuesday: “What’s up with Nato? Are they not protecting you?”

Before the announceme­nt of a ceasefire, the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh had continued unabated overnight with residents reporting heavy shelling of the enclave’s capital, Stepanaker­t.

Pashinyan’s government is likely to be able to withstand opposition protests as it continues to fully control the security services, according to the Yerevan-based political analyst Tigran Grigoryan.

However, any killings or forcible removal of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan would not only be a consequenc­e of Russia’s unwillingn­ess to intervene, but a failure of US and EU diplomacy, Grigoryan said.

“Ethnic cleansing is taking place on their [Russia’s] watch … But if the EU and US don’t act, they will lose all their credibilit­y alongside Russia.”

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