Current:Home > StocksOver 93,000 Armenians have now fled disputed enclave -SecureNest Finance
Over 93,000 Armenians have now fled disputed enclave
View
Date:2025-04-12 03:37:26
LONDON -- Over 93,000 ethnic Armenian refugees have fled Nagorno-Karabakh as of Friday, local authorities said, meaning 75% of the disputed enclave's entire population has now left in less than a week.
Tens of thousands of ethnic Armenians have been streaming out of Nagorno-Karabakh following Azerbaijan's successful military operation last week that restored its control over the breakaway region. It's feared the whole population will likely leave in the coming days, in what Armenia has condemned as "ethnic cleansing."
Families packed into cars and trucks, with whatever belongings they can carry, have been arriving in Armenia after Azerbaijan opened the only road out of the enclave on Sunday. Those fleeing have said they are unwilling to live under Azerbaijan's rule, fearing they will face persecution.
"There will be no more Armenians left in Nagorno-Karabakh in the coming days," Armenia's prime minister Nikol Pashinyan said in a televised government meeting on Thursday. "This is a direct act of ethnic cleansing," he said, adding that international statements condemning it were important but without concrete actions they were just "creating moral statistics for history."
The United States and other western countries have expressed concern about the displacement of the Armenian population from the enclave, urging Azerbaijan to allow international access.
Armenians have lived in Nagorno-Karabakh for centuries but the enclave is recognised internationally as part of Azerbaijan. It has been at the center of a bloody conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia since the late 1980s when the two former Soviet countries fought a war amid the collapse of the USSR.
MORE: Death toll rises in blast that killed dozens of Armenian refugees
That war left ethnic Armenian separatists in control of most of Nagorno-Karabakh and also saw hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijani civilians driven out. For three decades, an unrecognised Armenian state, called the Republic of Artsakh, existed in the enclave, while international diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict went nowhere.
But in 2020, Azerbaijan reopened the conflict, decisively defeating Armenia and forcing it to abandon its claims to Nagorno-Karabakh. Russia brokered a truce and deployed peacekeeping forces, which remain there.
Last week, after blockading the enclave for 9 months, Azerbaijan launched a new military offensive to complete the defeat of the ethnic Armenian authorities, forcing them to capitulate in just two days.
The leader of the ethnic Armenian's unrecognised state, the Republic of Artsakh, on Thursday announced its dissolution, saying it would "cease to exist" by the end of the year.
Azerbaijan's authoritarian president Ilham Aliyev has claimed the Karabakh Armenians' rights will be protected but he has previously promoted a nationalist narrative denying Armenians have a long history in the region. In areas recaptured by his forces in 2020, some Armenian cultural sites have been destroyed and defaced.
Some Azerbaijanis driven from their homes during the war in the 1990s have returned to areas recaptured by Azerbaijan since 2020. Aliyev on Thursday said by the end of 2023, 5,500 displaced Azerbaijanis would return to their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh, according to the Russian state news agency TASS.
Azerbaijan on Friday detained another former senior Karabakh Armenian official on Thursday as he tried to leave the enclave with other refugees. Azerbaijan's security services detained Levon Mnatsakanyan, who was commander of the Armenian separatists' armed forces between 2015-2018. Earlier this week, Azerbaijan arrested a former leader of the unrecognised state, Ruben Vardanyan, taking him to Baku and charging him with terrorism offenses.
veryGood! (25212)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- The Carbon Cost of California’s Most Prolific Oil Fields
- A Friday for the Future: The Global Climate Strike May Help the Youth Movement Rebound From the Pandemic
- Inside Clean Energy: Which State Will Be the First to Ban Natural Gas in New Buildings?
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Louisiana university bars a graduate student from teaching after a profane phone call to a lawmaker
- Beavers Are Flooding the Warming Alaskan Arctic, Threatening Fish, Water and Indigenous Traditions
- Inside Clean Energy: Warren Buffett Explains the Need for a Massive Energy Makeover
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Can TikTokkers sway Biden on oil drilling? The #StopWillow campaign, explained
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- To Meet Paris Accord Goal, Most of the World’s Fossil Fuel Reserves Must Stay in the Ground
- Locals look for silver linings as Amazon hits pause on its new HQ
- Activists Urge the International Energy Agency to Remove Paywalls Around its Data
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Chloë Grace Moretz's Summer-Ready Bob Haircut Will Influence Your Next Salon Visit
- Fires Fuel New Risks to California Farmworkers
- For Emmett Till’s family, national monument proclamation cements his inclusion in the American story
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Why does the Powerball jackpot increase over time—and what was the largest payout in history?
The truth is there's little the government can do about lies on cable
A Friday for the Future: The Global Climate Strike May Help the Youth Movement Rebound From the Pandemic
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Inside Clean Energy: Warren Buffett Explains the Need for a Massive Energy Makeover
2 teens found fatally shot at a home in central Washington state
Santa Barbara’s paper, one of California’s oldest, stops publishing after owner declares bankruptcy