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Leaving Iraq to settle for separatist Karabakh -- an Armenian story

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  • Leaving Iraq to settle for separatist Karabakh -- an Armenian story

    Agence France Presse
    April 24 2005

    Leaving Iraq to settle for separatist Karabakh -- an Armenian story

    24/04/2005 AFP

    LACHIN, Azerbaijan, April 24 (AFP) - 4h29 - Turkish massacres of
    Armenians which began 90 years ago on Sunday have a lot to do with
    why a pretty 29-year-old from Iraq is now living on one of the most
    contested chunks of land on earth in the Caucasus.

    An ethnic Armenian whose grandparents fled to Baghdad when Ottoman
    forces began their campaign against Armenians in eastern Anatolia,
    Anakhit Petrosyan once dreamed of coming to Armenia to work in the
    Iraqi embassy in Yerevan.

    But when a US bomb killed her father last year her plans changed and
    like her grandparents before her, she fled her birthplace to settle
    in the Lachin district of Azerbaijan which is controlled by
    pro-Armenian forces of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic.

    "I didn't know much about Karabakh, all I knew was that there had
    been a war here and these were our territories, we hoped to get help
    here," Petrosyan said.

    Armenians around the world mark April 24 as the day Ottoman Turks
    began the genocide of their people in 1915, something Turkey denies
    ever happened.

    But the events of the early 20th century are today overshadowed by
    Armenia's ongoing conflict with its other Turkic-speaking neighbor,
    Azerbaijan.

    In 1994, Armenia and its proxies captured Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic
    Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, as well as seven surrounding
    Azeri regions, through a gruelling six-year war that cost 25,000
    lives and displaced about one million people, 250,000 of them
    Armenians.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in solidarity with Azerbaijan,
    dealing a crippling economic blow to the former Soviet republic from
    which is has yet to recover.

    But Azerbaijan still claims the territories and 750,000 Azeri
    refugees remain in camps on the ready to return.

    A shaky ceasefire is often punctuated by increasingly frequent
    shootings that have taken at least a dozen lives this year.

    The escalation prompted the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe (OSCE) which is charged with mediating the conflict to
    express concern about the breaches as well as recent public
    statements about the possibility of war.

    Azerbaijan charges that Karabakh and Armenian authorities have put in
    place an Israeli-style settlement plan in the occupied regions
    outside of Karabakh itself, so that they can lay future claims to
    them.

    The Azeri claim is highlighted by cases like Petrosyan's who like
    other Armenians from the diaspora outside the former Soviet Union
    settled in the territory.

    The focus of those concerns has been the mountainous area in which
    Petrosyan and her family now live, the strategically important Lachin
    corridor, renamed Verdzor by the Armenians, which represents the only
    land route between Karabakh and Armenia.

    Unlike Karabakh, which had a 75-percent ethnic Armenian population
    before the war, Lachin was predominantly Azeri.

    A recent OSCE mission sent to the separatist republic to verify
    Azerbaijan's claims said in its findings that up to 12,000 people,
    mostly Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan, had been resettled in the
    area.

    This is immediately obvious to any visitor to Lachin where the only
    sign of it ever having been in Azerbaijan's hands are the
    eastern-style window portholes in some of its war-gutted
    administration buildings.

    Petrosyan, whose husband was wounded in the Iran-Iraq war of the
    1980s and taken prisoner by US forces in the Gulf war in 1991 said
    the possibility of another war with Azerbaijan would not deter her
    from staying in Lachin.

    "If we could fight for Iraq, then we can surely fight for our own
    homeland," she said.

    Lachin's authorities deny any "foreign" Armenians have settled in the
    area, or in fact that any live there at all.

    "We don't see our job as settling as many people as possible, our aim
    is to give the refugees a place to live and secure the corridor,"
    said Gagik Kosakyan, the deputy head of Lachin's administration.

    Securing the corridor has meant rebuilding much of the area's
    infrastructure and housing, so much so that the area looks more
    prosperous than the adjacent region within Armenia proper.

    Armenian officials have said any settlement over Karabakh would have
    to include an Azeri concession of Lachin, an area that saw some of
    the heaviest fighting during the war because of its strategic
    importance.

    Kosakyan estimated that the separatist republic had invested one
    million dollars (765,000 euros) a year to rehabilitate the region
    since 1994, with many extra funds coming from Armenia's influential
    diaspora in the West.

    And like many other refugees in the region informally polled by AFP
    Petrosyan she said she was intent on staying. "They can say what they
    want, but we know this is our land," she said.
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