Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Conflict On Ice

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Conflict On Ice

    CONFLICT ON ICE

    http://www.economist.com/node/21538216

    Nagorno-Karabakh
    A sore in relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan still festers

    Nov 12th 2011 | STEPANAKERT | from the print edition

    It's lovely in the summer .

    "I AM almost full for next summer", boasts Mike Aghjayan, an Armenian
    from Lebanon who is managing a new hotel in the town Azeris call Shusha
    and Armenians Shushi. Visitors, mostly diaspora Armenians, will come
    from the United States, Canada, France, Russia, Lebanon and Iran.

    In 1988 this was a pleasant hilltop town, home to 15,000. Today barely
    4,000 live on amid the ruins of war. His guests, Mr Aghjayan explains,
    "want to see the land people gave their blood for."

    Nagorno-Karabakh is often described as one of several post-Soviet
    "frozen conflicts". However, as the war in 2008 between Russia
    and Georgia over the breakaway territory of South Ossetia showed,
    ice can melt quickly. In Soviet times Nagorno-Karabakh was a mostly
    Armenian-populated autonomous enclave inside Azerbaijan, some 4,000
    square kilometres (1,540 square miles) big. Conflict erupted in 1988
    as the territory's Armenians sought to secede from Azerbaijan. By the
    time the war ended in 1994, the victorious Armenians had doubled the
    enclave's size and carved out a land corridor to Armenia proper.

    Between 1988 and 1994 more than 1m Armenians and Azeris fled from
    both countries and Nagorno-Karabakh. Azeri-populated towns in the
    region were left devastated.

    ReprintsOutsiders have worked on peace plans since 1995 but none
    has stuck. Yet the outline of a deal seems clear. Nagorno-Karabakh,
    which declared independence in 1991, will return to Azerbaijan much
    of the land it won in the war. Then, after an "interim" period, the
    people of the territory, including Azeri refugees living outside,
    will vote on its final status.

    Officials in Nagorno-Karabakh say there can be no deal without their
    agreement. This is not bravado. The president of Armenia and his
    predecessor are from the region. Ara Haratyunyan, Nagorno-Karabakh's
    prime minister, says he doubts Azerbaijan will ever accept his
    territory's independence. Still, he cheerfully points out, GDP has
    doubled in the past four years (largely thanks to transfers from
    Armenia and the diaspora).

    In contrast to the war years, Azerbaijan is flush with cash from
    oil and gas. This year 16.5% of its budget has been set aside
    for military spending: this is roughly equivalent to the entire
    budgets of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh combined. Yet officials in
    Stepanakert, Nagorno-Karabakh's capital, seem relaxed. Russia is
    committed to Armenia's defence. And a strategic pipeline pumping
    oil to the West from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan passes just 12 miles
    from Nagorno-Karabakh-controlled territory. Shelling could quickly
    cripple it.

Working...
X