Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Letter From Nagorno-Karabakh: When An Entire Country Becomes A Kind

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

  • Letter From Nagorno-Karabakh: When An Entire Country Becomes A Kind

    LETTER FROM NAGORNO-KARABAKH: WHEN AN ENTIRE COUNTRY BECOMES A KIND OF NO-MAN'S LAND

    The Irish Times
    Dec 17 2014

    Nagorno-Karabakh is an unrecognised statelet of deserted villages
    and tense front lines

    by Conor O'Clery

    In Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, polite officials
    stamped our passports and wished us a pleasant stay.

    They're happy to welcome foreigners to the Armenian- populated
    republic in the southern Caucasus. That's because no country in the
    world acknowledges its status.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is one of a small club of unrecognised statelets
    left stranded by the Soviet Union's collapse. It officially belongs
    to Azerbaijan, but was captured by Armenia 20 years ago, after a war
    that cost more than 30,000 lives.

    >From the Armenian capital of Yerevan, it took us seven hours to reach
    the territory, whose name means "Black Garden". The road traverses
    mountains with fantastic rock formations and dense beech forests. The
    last 65 kilometres of tarmac was constructed with $10 million (EURO 8
    million) from the Armenian diaspora, replacing a mountain track that
    cut off Nagorno-Karabakh in the winter.

    Stepanakert has been rebuilt since it was partly destroyed by Grad
    missiles in the 1990s. There are boulevards, fashionable shops and
    cafes with free wifi. Our final destination was Martakert, another
    hour across a featureless plateau, where my wife Zhanna has relatives.

    Desolate landscape

    Along the highway, old Ladas and modern army trucks lurched around
    each other to avoid deep potholes and flocks of sheep. To the east was
    an endless drab landscape of deserted villages. The roofless houses
    were once occupied by Azeris, who lived at peace in Soviet times but
    were forced to flee when war broke out.

    The house we stayed at in Martakert was just far enough away so that
    we didn't hear the occasional sniper and machine- gun fire down the
    road. The war may be over, but there is as yet no peace. The town lies
    beside an active front line, which divides two armies and stretches
    for hundreds of kilometres in each direction. It's marked by concrete
    bunkers, sandbags and camouflage netting.

    In the week of our visit, 20,000 shots were reportedly fired along
    the lines, and an Armenian officer and two Azeri soldiers were killed.

    There is no formal contact between the troops, not even a telephone
    line, though local conscripts have been known to meet at night in
    no-man's land to exchange cigarettes and recall how their parents
    were friends in the Soviet era.

    Many of the recruits stationed in Martakert are from Armenia proper,
    here to do their national service, for "independent" Nagorno-Karabakh
    is a practically a province of Armenia. The money in circulation is
    the Armenian dram. Yerevan provides services such as the free gas
    that flows through yellow pipes into every Martakert building.

    There is much poverty. Still, our host, like everyone else in town,
    has a large garden with vegetables,walnut trees, and pears, figs,
    grapes, persimmon and pomegranate. Over a meal of dolmadas and lavash
    bread stuffed with herbs and excellent home-made red wine, we talked
    of young men from Martakert who had become casualties in the war or
    were forced to seek a decent life elsewhere, usually in Russia.

    The adjacent house was wrecked by a shell in 1992 and the family never
    returned. The official population of Nagorno- Karabakh is 138,000,
    down from 200,000 before the war. Remittances from those living in
    Russia have dwindled with the falling rouble.

    At night we watched Moscow television channels. Russia is allied
    with Christian Armenia and provides a sense of protection against a
    full-scale invasion from Moslem Azerbaijan, which has been investing
    petro-dollars to upgrade its military with the declared aim of
    recovering lost territory.

    Accidental war

    The danger on this East-West fault line is war by accident, which
    could draw in Russia, Iran and Turkey. This year has seen the worst
    casualties along the front since 1994.

    In August, Russia president Vladimir Putin - in the unfamiliar role
    of peacemaker - presided over an emergency summit of the Armenian
    and Azerbaijan presidents to try to reactivate a peace process that
    would involve a phased return to Azerbaijan of occupied regions around
    Karabakh and an eventual referendum in the status of the region.

    People in the "Black Garden" are preparing to hold special
    commemorations next year to commemorate the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

    They hope it will not be remembered for more bloodshed.

    http://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/europe/letter-from-nagorno-karabakh-when-an-entire-country-becomes-a-kind-of-no-man-s-land-1.2040244

Working...
X