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Shusha Breathes New Life After Years Of Strife

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  • Shusha Breathes New Life After Years Of Strife

    SHUSHA BREATHES NEW LIFE AFTER YEARS OF STRIFE
    Daniel Bardsley

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?A ID=/20090721/FOREIGN/707209862/1013/ART
    July 20 2009
    UAE

    SHUSHA, Nagorno-Karabakh // With broken buildings and near-empty
    streets, this city of a few thousand has a desolate air, despite its
    spectacular mountain setting on a plateau overlooking the centre of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed region between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Before the war over control of the region erupted in 1988 between
    Muslim ethnic Azeris and Christian ethnic Armenians, there were
    25,000 people living in Shusha. At the time, Nagorno-Karabakh was
    an ethnic Armenian majority region within Azerbaijan. Shusha was the
    only large settlement in Nagorno-Karabakh with an Azeri majority. Now,
    the only residents of Shusha are 4,000 Armenians; all of the Azeris
    fled during the fighting.

    But Shusha, or Shushi as Armenians call it, is on the brink of the
    kind of renewal that has transformed Stepanakert, the enclave's
    capital that lies 16km to the north. Since a ceasefire was agreed in
    1994, with Armenia in de facto control, Stepanakert has turned into
    an attractive and leafy city with a string of new hotels, a modern
    assembly building and countless street cafes, even though Armenia
    and Azerbaijan are officially still at war over the region.

    To promote Shusha's regeneration, Nagorno-Karabakh's unrecognised
    ethnic Armenian government is moving ministries to the city, and
    at least one new hotel is planned as more tourists arrive, mostly
    diasporan Armenians from countries such as France, as well as those
    from Armenia itself.

    Also, funds from an annual telethon in November organised by the
    Hayastan All Armenian Fund, an international organisation set up
    by Armenian presidential decree in 1992, will go to Shusha. Most of
    those who now live there are ethnic Armenians who fled Azerbaijan as
    the conflict intensified.

    Armen Asryan, an ethnic Armenian, left the Azerbaijani capital Baku
    in 1988, first going to Russia before coming to Nagorno-Karabakh,
    where his parents originate, in 1997.

    The 40-year-old, a soft spoken cobbler, said for him the city was
    "not a depressing place".

    "I have come to my own land," he said from his ground-floor workshop
    beneath an apartment block.

    "There wasn't a chance to live in Stepanakert, but here the government
    gave us a free flat. It was ruined. There were no windows. We restored
    everything.

    During the war, when ethnic Armenians backed by Armenia fought
    Azerbaijan, Shusha was an Azeri stronghold and the source of many
    of the shells that landed on Stepanakert, forcing its residents to
    live in bunkers. Armenians took the city in an offensive in 1992 that
    resulted in heavy casualties on both sides.

    Ashot Ghoulian, chairman of the Nagorno-Karabakh national assembly,
    said government ministries were currently too heavily concentrated
    in Stepanakert. He said ministries covering such areas as culture,
    youth and sport were moving to Shusha.

    "Some of them will be in already existing buildings of great
    architectural value, maybe restored, and some buildings will be
    constructed for ministries," he said.

    Moving the ministries will help "activate the life" in Shusha, Mr
    Ghoulian added, although given the city's strong historical Azeri
    links, it may not be a popular move with Azerbaijan.

    "The most important reason why we want to activate the life of Shushi
    is the role Shushi played in the life of Armenian Karabakh earlier,"
    he said.

    Shusha dates from the mid-18th century and went on to develop separate
    quarters for its Muslim and Christian residents. Clashes between
    Azeris and Armenians began in the early 20th century and intensified
    after the First World War, when Azerbaijan claimed Nagorno-Karabakh.

    After a revolt in 1920, at a time when Nagorno-Karabakh was claimed by
    the short-lived Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, as many as 20,000 of
    the city's Armenian population were allegedly killed by authorities,
    an event Mr Ghoulian describes as a "massacre". The enclave became
    an autonomous region within the later Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist
    Republic.

    "In 1920, 45,000 people were living in Shushi, but by 1921 the
    population had decreased to 12,000 people," Mr Ghoulian said.

    "Nobody rejects that people of Azeri origin were living in Shushi
    [before the Nagorno-Karabakh war], but that was a result of the
    conflict of the past century. Today, nobody should distort that
    historical fact.

    "Conflicts always change the demographic situation. Shushi is a city
    with a tragic fate. Even centuries ago the city was fought over."

    The city's Ghazanchetsots Cathedral has been restored since the
    conflict ended and is now one of the few pristine-looking buildings
    in the city. Despite the Muslim residents of Shusha having fled,
    there are still several mosques, although the minaret of one of them
    is badly damaged.

    While Shusha still appears to be a broken city, Mr Asryan said it
    showed signs of improvement.

    "During the past five years it has developed," he said. "There is
    more transport here. Many buildings are restored now and more people
    live here compared to previous years.

    "It was obvious it would be difficult to live here but now it's
    developing."
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