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The Irish Times": Nagorno-Karabakh's People Are Clear On The Future:

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  • The Irish Times": Nagorno-Karabakh's People Are Clear On The Future:

    THE IRISH TIMES": NAGORNO-KARABAKH'S PEOPLE ARE CLEAR ON THE FUTURE: ONLY INDEPENDENCE OR UNIFICATION WITH ARMENIA WILL DO

    Panorama.am
    24/04/2012

    24 years on, the Armenian-Azeri conflict is still unresolved, writes
    Daniel McLaughlin, the reporter for the Irish daily newspaper "The
    Irish Times," in an article about Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    "It was very hard during the war. The whole city was being bombarded
    and people lived in their basements, but we live freely now and will
    defend that to the last. Whatever it takes," says Robert Bagiryan,
    who was a tank commander in the 1988-1994 war for the break away
    of Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan and declaration of
    independence, "The Irish Times" writes.

    The author of the publication notes that amid the chaos of the Soviet
    Union's collapse, Nagorno-Karabakh's majority Armenians demanded an
    end to Azeri discrimination and the creation of their own state. About
    30,000 people died in a war and more than one million were forced to
    leave their houses.

    24 years after the conflict began, it is still unresolved, no
    peace deal has been signed, the world still does not recognize
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and Azeri and Armenian soldiers regularly exchange
    deadly fire across a tense ceasefire line, writes D. McLaughlin.

    "The Azeris bombarded us relentlessly, it was a time of terrible
    stress and the kids were traumatised. We couldn't live with the
    Azeris again. It's impossible. All trust has been lost," says 50
    y.o. Gayane Danilyan.

    Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia say the regional assembly's 1988 vote
    to break away from Azerbaijan was in line with Mikhail Gorbachev's
    liberalised Soviet laws, while Azerbaijan insists it was an illegal
    attempt to change borders and destroy its "territorial integrity,"
    "The Irish Times" writes. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the
    row over Nagorno-Karabakh, which is rooted in the history of both
    Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan, fuelled virulent nationalism,
    vicious pogroms and allegations of ethnic cleansing. After initially
    gaining the upper hand and besieging Stepanakert, the Azeris then
    were forced back until Armenian troops took Nagorno-Karabakh and
    seven adjoining regions.

    Armenia accuses Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliyev, who became
    president in 2003 following his father's death, of using bellicose
    rhetoric to boost support for his autocratic regime, writes the author
    in the article, adding that Armenia has withdrawn from Eurovision
    Song Contest in Baku, because Ilham Aliyev recently called Armenians
    the greatest enemy of Azerbaijan.

    Azerbaijan offers a maximum degree of autonomy to the region and
    wants Armenian troops to leave areas adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh as
    a first step towards peace. Armenia claims that is impossible until
    its safety and status are assured by a final agreement, insisting
    on the Karabakhis' right to self-determination. Nagorno-Karabakh's
    people are clear on the future: only independence or unification with
    Armenia will do, the article says.

    "Life isn't easy here, but at least we live in our own state and
    feel free," notes a seller named Armine. In his turn, the former tank
    commander Bagiryan says: "We spilt our blood to escape Azeri control.

    If they try anything again they'll get what they deserve. They will
    regret it."

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