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Tavush Trouble: Questions Linger On After Carnage Of Armenian Soldie

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  • Tavush Trouble: Questions Linger On After Carnage Of Armenian Soldie

    TAVUSH TROUBLE: QUESTIONS LINGER ON AFTER CARNAGE OF ARMENIAN SOLDIERS NEAR BORDER WITH AZERBAIJAN
    By Gohar Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow
    02.05.12 | 13:22

    Photo: Gohar Abrahamyan/ArmeniaNow.com

    Last week's news of three Armenian servicemen murdered in an apparent
    ambush attack near the border with Azerbaijan continues to draw
    reactions and cause speculations both in the media and among common
    citizens.

    Late last week, the Armenian Defense Ministry reported that three
    soldiers were killed on the road between the villages of Movses
    and Aygepar in Armenia's northeastern Tavush province as the car
    on which they were traveling in the small hours of April 27 came
    under what appeared to be an Azeri shelling. It was later reported
    that one serviceman survived the attack almost unscathed. No other
    circumstances of the incident were reported.

    The three men who died were later identified as 27-year-old David
    Abgaryan, 25-year-old Aram Yesayan and 21-year-old Arshak Nersisyan.

    All were natives of the nearby town of Berd and had served in the
    Armenian armed forces under contracts. The survivor, 27-year-old
    Arkady Yesayan, is also from Berd and is also a contract serviceman.

    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    representatives conducted a ceasefire monitoring of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijan border in the troubled section on Monday, reporting
    no incidents during their short mission. Accompanied by the Armenian
    military, the field aides to the OSCE chairman-in-office also visited
    the site of the Friday deadly attack, while at the Berd military
    police precinct they were allowed to have a detailed examination and
    take pictures and video of the vehicle that came under fire.

    The OSCE officials were also told that Azeri drones were seen in the
    sky during the days leading to the attack on the ground.

    An Armenian investigation is still on in connection with that incident
    and no official version of the events has yet been announced.

    However, different speculations were made in the immediate aftermath
    of the incident and later on. Some media spread information according
    to which the bodies had been mutilated. This would be direct
    evidence of an infiltration by a group of Azeri commandos into the
    Armenian-controlled territory. According to some unverified media
    reports, the Armenian soldiers were AWOL and did not possess weapons
    when confronted by Azeri commandos, becoming easy prey.

    Meanwhile, some initial speculation also included a possible internal
    argument resulting in a shootout. Within hours after the news was
    reported, Helsinki Citizens Assembly Vanadzor Office Director Artur
    Sakunts postedd a comment in a Facebook discussion group claiming to
    having received information "from several sources" that "the contract
    servicemen were killed as a result of a dispute among themselves in
    which firearms were used."

    "There is also information that there were more people involved
    in it...

    It is not yet clear what the reason for the argument was....

    Unfortunately, we again have to deal with deaths in the ranks caused
    by the violation of the rules of discipline," said the human rights
    activist.

    Sakunts himself, however, denied this version the following day after
    visiting the scene. He described it as "surely a sabotage activity"
    after what he witnessed there.

    One resident in Berd also doubted it could have been the result of
    a firefight among the fellow soldiers as he talked to ArmeniaNow at
    the weekend.

    "Many people say that these guys had a fight and killed each other,
    but I can say with certitude that there was no such thing. They grew
    up before our eyes, all were from this area, were very close to each
    other. Only Azeris could do that," he said.

    During the soldiers' funeral, attended by hundreds of people near
    Berd's house of culture, Chairman of the Council of War Veterans of
    Armenia Simon Yesayan called the deadly incident "a result of the
    base policies and bloody activities of Azerbaijan" - a country that,
    he said, still cannot put up with the defeat that it suffered in the
    Karabakh war in 1994.

    "I am sure that they had another goal - to capture a village or a
    military base, but an encounter with these guys upset their heinous
    plans," said Yesayan.

    The attack followed days of intensified ceasefire violations near the
    border in Tavush. In one such violation last Wednesday Azeri snipers
    fired shots at a kindergarten in the Armenian border village of Dovegh,
    necessitating a prompt evacuation of the children and personnel.

    ArmeniaNow also visited the only survivor of the attack, Arkady
    Yesayan. The soldier who is still recovering from shock has no serious
    health problems otherwise.

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