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Washington Post: Armenians Urged To Settle In Border Lands

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  • Washington Post: Armenians Urged To Settle In Border Lands

    ARMENIANS URGED TO SETTLE IN BORDER LANDS
    By Will Englund

    Washington Post
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/armenians-urged-to-settle-in-border-lands/2011/07/11/gIQAPPKeGI_story.html
    July 15 2011

    STEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh - A former foreign minister of this
    unrecognized republic in the South Caucasus wants to distribute land
    in border areas to Armenians who fled Azerbaijan two decades ago when
    war broke out. Arman Meliqyan says this would be compensation for the
    property they lost when they fled - and it would also, intentionally,
    help to wreck the proposed peace deal that is on the table.

    Azerbaijan, which still claims Nagorno-Karabakh, would be certain
    to see such a move as an enormous provocation. It says that, as the
    result of wide-scale ethnic cleansing, a million Azerbaijanis fled
    the territory now held by Karabakh forces, and that they want to
    return to their homes.

    Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan stopped fighting in 1994, but have
    never come to terms. Both sides still shoot sporadically at each other
    across the so-called line of contact. Growing tension has already
    heightened fears that war could break out again - and that this time
    there's a threat of drawing neighboring Russia, Iran and Turkey into
    the conflict. War would also probably disrupt a key supply route used
    by the United States to get equipment and other goods to its soldiers
    in Afghanistan.

    Meliqyan's idea is to move settlers into territories adjacent to
    Nagorno-Karabakh itself that were seized by Armenian and Karabakh
    fighters during the war and have been held ever since. Those
    territories are now nearly empty of people, and most of the villages
    within them have been left in ruins. A framework peace agreement
    that Russia, France and the United States - together called the Minsk
    Group - have been trying to sponsor envisions the return of most of
    these lands to Azerbaijan.

    If they were to be populated by ethnic Armenian settlers, that would
    become considerably more difficult. This is precisely what Meliqyan,
    who is completely opposed to the Minsk Group formula, hopes to achieve.

    His plan inevitably raises the question of what compensation would
    be available for the Azerbaijanis who also fled - out of Karabakh -
    during the war. But he thinks that's Azerbaijan's problem.

    Under Karabakh law, Armenians who fled Azerbaijan are entitled to
    land in the territories as compensation. But the program has never
    gotten underway, though a few settlers have trickled in on their own
    over the years. Meliqyan, who now heads an advocacy group in Yerevan,
    the capital of Armenia, says his organization has submitted 35,000
    applications for land and gotten no response.

    "They're not saying yes, and they're not saying no," he said of
    Karabakh's leaders. "Sooner or later it will become a real question
    for them."

    Karabakh's president, Bako Sahakyan, said the problem is that the
    territories are in such bad physical shape that it would take a major
    investment in roads and utilities just to make them habitable. He also
    made it clear he doesn't want to undermine the peace talks. Another
    problem, said Karabakh's prime minister, Ara Harutyunyan, is that
    most of those who left Azerbaijan were living in cities there, are
    used to an urban way of life and would be lost trying to set up farms.

    It's a half-good idea, said Saro Saroyan, a civil defense instructor
    who has become one of the most outspoken advocates for these dispersed
    people. (What to call them is a point of contention: Armenians use the
    word "refugee," which is commonly reserved for people who have had
    to cross an international border. Azerbaijanis, who don't recognize
    Karabakh's independence, use the phrase "internally displaced persons,"
    arguing that they're still in Azerbaijan. Some people here contend
    that those who fled Azerbaijan should be called "deportees.")

    The problem, as Saroyan sees it, is that a few acres of farmland would
    hardly compensate someone who had to give up an apartment in Baku,
    the capital of Azerbaijan, especially considering the oil wealth and
    rise in property values that Baku has enjoyed since the war ended.

    Saroyan left Baku in 1988, when the first stirrings of the Karabakh
    independence movement were felt. He went first to Stepanakert but
    eventually wound up in Shushi - known as Shusha to the Azerbaijanis
    - where both his grandfathers served time in a Soviet prison in the
    1930s: one for being a rich peasant, the other for being the driver of
    a car in an accident that killed an important communist official. He
    loves showing visitors around the old quarters of the town, which was
    Karabakh's most important city when it was under Persian and later
    czarist Russian rule.

    But being a modern-day homesteader doesn't have much appeal for him.

    He misses Baku, where his driver grandfather is buried, and he said
    that, like others, he's never felt entirely at home in Karabakh.

    "We're integrated in society, but we can't be integrated 100 percent,"
    he said.

    This article was developed in cooperation with the Pulitzer Center
    on Crisis Reporting.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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