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  • Nagorny Karabakh Woos Tourists

    Caucasus Reporting Service
    Nagorny Karabakh Woos Tourists

    The Karabakh Armenians aim to overcome security fears by trumpeting the
    region's ancient monasteries and beautiful scenery.

    By Ashot Beglarian in Stepanakert (CRS No. 349, 20-July-06)

    Twelve years after war ended in Nagorny Karabakh, the unrecognised
    republic is seeking to attract greater numbers of tourists to enjoy
    its unspoilt scenery and medieval churches.

    Large sums have been invested in the tourism sector, especially by
    businessmen from the Armenian diaspora. The Swiss firm Sirkap Armenia
    has built several hotels at a cost of more than 1.5 million US dollars.

    There's been a big increase in the number of hotels, as memories of
    war recede. There are now more than 20 in Nagorny Karabakh, half of
    them in the capital Stepanakert. Two new ones, with about 100 rooms
    between them, are being built in the town's central square.

    The old capital of Shushi (known by the Azerbaijanis as Shusha), which
    was heavily destroyed in the war in 1992, is also being re-developed. A
    Soviet-era 11-storey hotel is being rebuilt and is expected to open
    its doors again within the next two years. In addition, there are
    plans to reopen the sanatoria that attracted thousands of summer
    visitors in former times.

    Karabakh's foreign ministry says that the number of tourists is
    increasing by 30-40 per cent every year and that last year there were
    5,000 from more than 60 countries. The majority - around 70 per cent -
    were ethnic Armenians from around the world.

    For many people, Karabakh is still a war-zone and most western
    governments advise their citizens against travelling there on grounds
    of safety. It is still part of the internationally recognised territory
    of Azerbaijan.

    This is enough to deter curious visitors. Nic Keulemans, a tourist
    from Belgium, said he was overwhelmed by the scenery in Karabakh,
    although he was still a little worried about the problem of mines.

    "The monasteries are also interesting," he said. "I visited Gandzasar
    and the church in Shushi. On the whole my impressions were good. I
    didn't like the fact that because of the war there was limited access
    to certain territories. I think mines and unexploded ordnance still
    present a certain danger. They can be on fields, hills and remote
    mountain paths. And that gets in the way of organising a real holiday."

    Sergei Shakhverdian, head of both the Aspar tourist firm and the
    recently created Agency for Tourism Development, sees one of his
    roles as reassuring foreign visitors.

    "The main thing is to convince people that it is safe in Karabakh
    and that is what we are consistently doing," he said.

    Karabakhis point out that their home region is packed with attractions
    that are all the more attractive for being virtually unknown to the
    outside world. They include 1,700 architectural monuments, including
    600 monasteries and 500 churches, ruined palaces, castles and forts.

    Shakhverdian said that the mass of medieval religious sites also made
    Karabakh a very special place for Christian pilgrims. He pointed out
    that the region contains the grave of the early Christian saint Elisei;
    that the 13th century Gandzasar monastery claims to have the head of
    John the Baptist; and the ancient Amaras monastery has the mausoleum
    of St Grigoris.

    The tourism industry is still very much in its infancy in Karabakh. The
    government budget allocated for the sector for this year is just
    4,000 dollars.

    Although the scenery is a major attraction, visitors say that there
    is very little infrastructure for staying outside the main two towns,
    as there are no campsites and no car rental available. The tourist
    agents say they dream of developing Karabakh as a ski resort, but
    that would need huge amounts of investment.

    The ministry of territorial management has begun a partnership with
    the tourist development agency of Armenia, which provides the only
    route into Karabakh for visitors - a road from Yerevan to Stepanakert,
    which is 360 kilometres long.

    The minister, Armo Tsaturian said, "The development of tourism in
    Nagorny Karabakh would receive a significant boost if there was
    an air-link."

    In order to attract new visitors, the Karabakh government is publishing
    a new guidebook. It is also promoting Karabakh at tourist exhibitions.

    In May, the government here rented a pavilion at the big tourist
    exhibition in Moscow, where they handed out promotional material and
    offered visitors Karabakh wine to taste.

    The opening of the display turned into an angry confrontation,
    when a group of Azerbaijani students sitting in the hall protested
    loudly. But Shakhverdian denied reports that the pavilion had closed
    after the protests.

    "Information that the Nagorny Karabakh display in Moscow had
    been shut down came from the Azerbaijani embassy in Russia," said
    Shakhverdian. "Right from the start of the exhibition, the embassy of
    Azerbaijan reacted very strongly to our presence and tried to persuade
    the organisers to close the display, but when they understood that it
    wouldn't work they demanded that at the very least the name of our
    display was changed from the Nagorny Karabakh Republic to Nagorny
    Karabakh.

    "However, to its credit, the Moscow government did not give in
    to blackmail and the exhibition passed off normally, according to
    our plans."

    Shakhverdian said that the furore surrounding the event had actually
    attracted more visitors to the Nagorny Karabakh pavilion, curious to
    know what had caused all the fuss. He hoped some of those visitors
    would make their way to Karabakh itself.

    IWPR's Baku office contacted Azerbaijan's foreign ministry spokesman,
    Tahir Tagizade, for an official reaction to the campaign to attract
    tourists to Karabakh.

    Tagizade said that Azerbaijan was "not in principle against advertising
    the tourist attractions of Nagorny Karabakh because Nagorny Karabakh is
    part of Azerbaijan and soon after the restoration of the jurisdiction
    of Azerbaijan this advertising will be beneficial to the region".

    However, Tagizade warned foreigners visiting Nagorny Karabakh without
    official permission from Baku that they risked being barred from
    Azerbaijan.

    Ashot Beglarian is a freelance journalist based in
    Stepanakert. Azerbaijan editor Shahin Rzayev in Baku contributed to
    this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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