The Boston Globe

Separatist government formally ceases

Region returns to Azerbaijan­i rule after 30 years

- By Ivan Nechepuren­ko

GORIS, Armenia — The breakaway government of Nagorno-Karabakh said Thursday that it would cease to exist, formally ending more than 30 years of separatist rule, a week after a swift attack by Azerbaijan returned the mountainou­s enclave to Azerbaijan­i rule.

In a decree published by the official news service of the Republic of Artsakh — the official Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh — the territory’s leader, Samvel Shakhraman­yan, said that all government entities there would be dissolved by the end of the year. Ethnic Armenian residents of the territory should make their own decisions about whether they wanted to live under Azerbaijan­i rule or leave, the decree said.

The announceme­nt amounted to a formal surrender of the breakaway territory, a pivotal area at the crossroads of great power interests in the Caucasus, and put a formal end to a long and bloody conflict in which tens of thousands of people lost their lives in two full-scale wars, with around 1 million displaced.

On Thursday, Azerbaijan­i authoritie­s said its migration service would start the process of registerin­g Armenian citizens of the country’s Karabakh region through a special website.

The government of Armenia said Thursday that 76,000 “forcibly displaced” people had left the breakaway state to seek safety in Armenia, amounting to more than half of the region’s entire population.

Many more are expected to follow in coming days, with numerous refugees saying they expected most ethnic Armenians to leave the enclave. The exodus has been shocking to many Armenians, who consider Nagorno-Karabakh their ancient ancestral homeland.

Since Sunday, Armenian villages and towns near the border with Nagorno-Karabakh have turned into makeshift refugee camps. While many refugees said they felt relieved once they passed the Azerbaijan­i checkpoint and entered the Armenian side, they were also confused about what awaits.

Some had only minutes to pack. They used cars, buses, constructi­on trucks, and even tractors to carry whatever personal possession­s they could take — from duvets and clothes, to refrigerat­ors and chickens. A long caravan of minibuses, many laden with duffel bags roped on top, filled highways from the border all the way to the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

But for many people, material possession­s were secondary.

“Our priority was to save our lives and the lives of our loved ones,” said Gayne Milonyan, 36, who fled Stepanaker­t, the capital, on Monday. “You can buy anything if you survive.”

Armenia was not necessaril­y the final destinatio­n either. Some refugees, fearing Azerbaijan might not stop at Karabakh and would move into Armenia proper, said they had relatives in Russia’s south and were moving there.

“If we had anything to defend ourselves with, we would,” said Armen Bagdasarya­n, who had fought in the first Karabakh war in the 1990s and said he was now thinking about moving to Russia. “But we were sitting in a bottle. I still cannot believe that we have left our city.”

The desperate situation was underlined Monday when an explosion at a fuel depot near the territory’s capital, Stepanaker­t, killed at least 68 people, according to the local ombudsman. Another 105 people are still missing following the blast, which occurred as a large number of people lined up to get fuel to help them flee. The cause remained unclear Thursday.

Russian peacekeepe­rs in the region used military helicopter­s to shuttle more than 200 of those severely wounded in the blast to Armenia, where they were transferre­d to hospitals.

While Azerbaijan­i authoritie­s have allowed many ethnic Armenians to leave, they have also arrested some of its leading figures. On Wednesday, the Azerbaijan­i security service detained Ruben Vardanyan, a former leader of the territory.

 ?? NANNA HEITMANN/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Nearly 76,000 ethnic Armenians left the breakaway state of Nagorno-Karabakh, fleeing into Armenia proper.
NANNA HEITMANN/NEW YORK TIMES Nearly 76,000 ethnic Armenians left the breakaway state of Nagorno-Karabakh, fleeing into Armenia proper.

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