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  • Search For Causes Of USSR Disintegration In Karabakh -5

    SEARCH FOR CAUSES OF USSR DISINTEGRATION IN KARABAKH -5

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Sept 12 2014

    12 September 2014 - 12:59pm

    By Peter Lyukimson, Kuryer, Israel, N28-32, June 1992

    Peter Lyukimson lived in Baku until 1991. He worked as a journalist
    there in the late 80s-early 90s and witnessed the events preceding
    the conflict around Nagorno-Karabakh, Sumgayit, Khojaly...

    The feature story "Nagorno-Karabakh: chronicles of the conflict. Notes
    of a Jew from Baku" was written in 1992, soon after the move of
    the author to Israel. It was published in a Russian-language paper
    of Israel named Kuryer. Those were the times when the tone in the
    cultural and the public life of the Russian-speaking community of
    Israel was set by the Moscow and Saint Petersburg clerisy. It had a
    big impact on the attitude of Israeli society towards the events on
    the territory of the former USSR. They sympathized with Armenia in its
    conflict with Azerbaijan. As it turned out, most Israelis knew nothing
    about the origin of the conflict or the truth about its development.

    The position of the Jewish clerisy on the issue was formed based only
    on publications in the central Soviet and partly on Western press,
    which were not always impartial.

    After July 10, the Armenian population of the NKAO started open
    confrontation with the forces and residents of Azerbaijani villages.

    Shooting, arson, cattle thefts, attacks on cars, murders of Azerbaijani
    shepherds started...

    This could not go without concerns in Baku. In July 1989, a clerisy
    group created the People's Front of Azerbaijan. It is noteworthy
    that the leaders of the PFA were saying from the very start that the
    PFA was a people's front, not a nationalistic one, it had no goal to
    create the kind of mono-ethnic state that Armenia had become after
    driving out Azerbaijanis.

    The August of 1989 brought more tensions. Armenia started shelling
    Azerbaijani border villages, murders in Karabakh continued... Soon,
    "the assembly of authorized representatives of the NKAO" confirmed
    that the region was not part of Azerbaijan. In response, the PFA held
    many-thousand-strong protests. The city was in anti-Armenian hysteria,
    exacerbated by the right wing of the PFA and the sacking of Armenians.

    The expulsion process gained momentum after December 1, when the
    Supreme Council of Armenia passed the decree on restoration of
    the Armenian SSR and Nagorno-Karabakh. In general, it was a simple
    declaration of war on Azerbaijan. Airborne forces of the Armenian
    National Army started deploying in the NKAO, declaring full transfer
    of Azerbaijanis from Karabakh...

    In such conditions, the PFA called for the formation of Azerbaijan's
    own national army and immediate deportation of Armenians from Baku
    according to the international eviction laws of citizens whose country
    is at war with another state. The communist regime in Azerbaijan was
    in danger, and Moscow had had to understand it... In early January,
    the Armenian Armed Forces added the economic development plan of the
    NKAO to the state plan of the Armenian SSR. Moscow was silent.

    Many protests demanded the resignation of the communist government...

    Rumours that Baku would start Armenian pogroms on January 13 appeared.

    The Central Committee, the KGB and the Interior Ministry could not
    have been unaware of it...

    On January 13, pogroms did start. Some mobile groups of 10-12 people
    were breaking into Armenian houses and throwing their owners out
    onto the street, looting and committing violence. The police and the
    military responded to calls of neighbours roughly as follows:

    "What can we do? We have not been given any orders..." Tens of
    thousands of people at the Central Committee were demanding its
    resignation.

    On the night of January 19, it became clear that Yazov was on his
    way to Baku to restore order in the city personally...

    At the ambulance sub-station, at 11.00, calls were received, asking for
    Kala pilots to the village struck by shootings, there were killings
    and injuries... Doctors tried to make it through tanks. Doctor
    Sasha Markhevka, sitting next to the driver, screamed and hit the
    windshield. A bullet in his hand span around blood vessels, went
    through a lung and out through the back. Bullets with an offset
    balance were used, they are banned under international law. Another
    ambulance made it through and helped the injured. On the way back,
    it was stopped by patrols and the injured were thrown out of the
    car. 7-8 hours were left before the curfew...

    At midnight, the order to unblock was given. Breaking the walls of
    the Salyan barracks, tanks and armored vehicles moved through the
    streets of the city, shooting at houses, crushing trucks and cars
    and leaving dozens of twisted corpses behind. Protesters scattered,
    a real hunt for them began... Houses were under fire, bullets were
    finding newer victims. That is how 15-year-old Vera Bessantina,
    a girl with amazing eyes who was writing poems, died that night.

    She was not the only child whose time came to an end. Coming out on
    the streets in the morning, Baku residents saw corpses on roads and
    sidewalks, heads and arms lying under their feet, blood over asphalt,
    on walls of houses. Helicopters were circling around the city, throwing
    leaflets. They said that a curfew had been imposed on Baku last night
    and the military were calling for peace. "It was done by the Russian
    army!" was the reaction. There was nothing surprising that threats
    towards Russians were heard in ships and on streets on January 20. The
    commandant's office was in a hurry to organize an evacuation...

    soon, thousands of refugees appeared in Russian cities, speaking
    about the cruelty of Azerbaijanis and assuring that the military
    had entered the city to protect the Russians. It was just what the
    propaganda machine of Moscow needed, it hurried to announce that the
    forces in Baku had needed to interfere to prevent the Russian-speaking
    population of the city from being butchered. Yes, there were victims,
    several terrorists died, condolences to their families...

    The terrorists were Sasha Markhevka, Vera Bessantina (by the way,
    they were both Jews), 9-year-old Larisa, a Mrs Mamedova, and a boy
    whose corpse has never been identified.

    "Voices against Russians sounded here," shouted an orator through
    the microphone, "But what have Russians got to do with that, not to
    mention Baku residents. The communists, they were the ones saving
    themselves last night, they were the ones the soldiers protected,
    they were responsible for what happened! Can honest people stay in
    the party of fascists after all that happened?" And people started
    throwing away their party membership cards then.

    To be continued

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/society/59869.html

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