Almost all ethnic Armenians flee Nagorno-Karabakh
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Ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh cross the border with Azerbaijan by car, carrying their belongings with them, near the village of Kornidzor, Armenia.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
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KORNIDZOR, Armenia - The flood of refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh dwindled to a trickle on Saturday, as Armenia said nearly the entire population of the breakaway territory had already fled after Azerbaijan seized back control.
An AFP journalist at the Kornidzor crossing into Armenia saw only several ambulances arrive, as border guards said they were waiting for a final few buses.
In the nearest town of Goris, hundreds of exhausted refugees waited among their baggage in the central square for the government to offer accommodation.
Azerbaijan’s lightning military takeover of the ethnic Armenian enclave
Armenia said on Saturday that 100,437 people from an estimated population of 120,000 had fled since the breakaway region saw its decades-long fight against Azerbaijani rule end in sudden defeat.
Yerevan said 14 bedridden patients had died during or shortly after having been evacuated along the lone mountain road out of the territory.
Mr Artak Beglaryan, a former separatist official, said “the last groups” of Nagorno-Karabakh residents were on their way to Armenia on Saturday. “At most a few hundred persons remain, most of whom are officials, emergency services employees, volunteers, some persons with special needs,” he wrote on social media.
Armenia – a country of 2.8 million – faces a major challenge housing the sudden influx of refugees, and the authorities said 35,000 were now in temporary accommodation.
Yerevan has accused Azerbaijan of conducting a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” to clear Nagorno-Karabakh
But Baku has denied the claim and has publicly called on the Armenian residents of the territory to stay and “reintegrate” into Azerbaijan.
The United Nations has said it will send a mission to Nagorno-Karabakh
France lashed out at Azerbaijan for allowing the mission in only after most residents had already fled.
Azerbaijan claims soldier shot
With tensions high between the Caucasus neighbours, Azerbaijan said one of its soldiers was killed by an Armenian sniper on their heavily militarised border.
Armenia quickly denied the accusation, saying the claim its forces had opened fire on Azerbaijani positions “does not correspond to reality”.
Exchanges of fire along the border between the two Caucasus foes are common.
But so far, the two sides have prevented the recent flare-up over Nagorno-Karabakh from spilling over into a broader confrontation.
People gather near an aid centre for refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh in the border village of Kornidzor, Armenia.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Azerbaijan’s 24-hour offensive to retake the enclave appears to have decisively ended the bloody struggle over the region’s status that has dragged on since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The separatists agreed on Thursday to dissolve their government and become a formal part of Azerbaijan by the end of 2023.
The decision marked the end of one of the world’s longest and seemingly most intractable “frozen conflicts” – one that Azerbaijan was able to finally win while longstanding Armenian ally Russia was bogged down in its war on Ukraine.
Azerbaijan is now holding “reintegration” talks with separatist leaders while at the same time detained some senior figures from its former government and military command. Former separatist foreign minister David Babayan, who announced earlier he would surrender, was the latest arrested by Baku.
Pressure on Pashinyan
Some 3,000 opponents of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan resumed anti-government protests with a rally at Yerevan’s main square on Saturday.
Mr Pashinyan’s critics – who had paused demonstrations to focus on helping refugees – accuse him of abandoning the separatist region in the face of Azerbaijan’s aggression.
“We’ve lost Karabakh, now we don’t want to lose Armenia,” 38-year-old linguist Maria Asatryan told AFP.
“The longer Pashinyan stays in power, the worse the situation will become. People must unite and tell Pashinyan to step down.”
A Nagorno-Karabakh flag flies as Armenian anti-government demonstrators attend an opposition rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, in downtown Yerevan.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
But so far, the opposition has failed to muster major crowds to stage a concerted bid to oust him from power.
Mr Pashinyan has tried to deflect the blame on Russia.
Moscow has deployed peacekeepers in the region who were meant to police a truce ending a 2020 war in which Baku clawed back some of the lands it lost to the separatists in the 1990s.
Mr Pashinyan called Yerevan’s current alliances “ineffective”, and urged Parliament in this week’s session to ratify a document that would make Armenia a member of the International Criminal Court.
The ICC has issued an international arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Kremlin said it would treat Armenia’s ICC membership as an “extremely hostile” step. AFP

