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Anthem: Azat ou Ankakh Artsakh ("Free and Independent Artsakh") | |||||
Location of Nagorno-Karabakh (coloured in light tan) in the South Caucasus region. | |||||
Political status | Unrecognized | ||||
Languages | Armenian | ||||
Capital | Stepanakert (Xankəndi) | ||||
President | Arkady Ghoukasyan | ||||
Prime Minister | Anushavan Danielyan | ||||
Independence – Voted Upon – Approved – Recognition |
From Azerbaijan December 10, 1991 January 6, 1992 none | ||||
Area | 4,400 km² 1,699 sq mi | ||||
Population Ethnic Composition |
145,000 (est. 2002) Over 95% Armenian 5% minorities | ||||
Currency | Dram (AMD) (Armenian) | ||||
Time zone | UTC +4 (DST +5) | ||||
Calling Code | 374 97 (Karabakh Telecome GSM) |
Nagorno-Karabakh is a territory of Azerbaijan that has declared itself independent as the self-styled <re>Any reference to "NKR" must be preceeded either by: 1) so-called, or 2) self-styled or 3) unrecognized. This is what all authoritative sources like US State Department , New York Times , RFE/RL , TIME Magazine , BBC , UK Parliament , MFA of China , etc. Thus, as you can see, it is very much a standard and a neutral POV.</ref> Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh (NKR). It is in the South Caucasus, about 270 kilometres (about 170 mi.) west of the Azerbaijani capital Baku. The predominantly Armenian region has been a source of dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan since the final years of the Soviet Union. Karabakh is currently under Armenian military control, as a result of the subsequent war that took place between both countries in the aftermath of the dissolution of the USSR. The conflict flared high in February 1988 when local Armenian population attempted to attach then Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) to Armenia and the Armenian Parliament accepted it. However, both the Azerbaijan Parliament and the USSR Supreme Soviet, rejected the demand and ruled that NKAO must remain part of Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijan Parliament abolished the autonomy of NKAO in November 1991. Then the local Armenian population, with support from Armenia, declared independence from Azerbaijan December 10, 1991, despite Soviet Constitution, as well as Azerbaijan Constitution, not allowing any autonomous regions (oblast) or otherwise non-Union Republics (such as the 15 constituent republics of USSR) to succeed. The self-styled NKR's sovereign status is not recognized by any country or international organization in the world. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been holding peace talks mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group, where, among other issues, the future status of the region is being discussed.
Name
In Armenian it is called Template:Hayeren, (translit. Lernayin Gharabagh). In Azerbaijani, Dağlıq Qarabağ or Yuxarı Qarabağ, literally "mountainous black garden" or "upper black garden". In Russian: Нагорный Карабах, translit. Nagornyy Karabakh). In Persian: قره باغ . The word "Karabakh" originated from Turkic "kara" (meaning "black") and Persian "bagh (باغ)" (meaning "garden"), literally meaning "black garden." The name first appears in Georgian and Persian sources in 13 - 14th centuries . The related term Karabagh is described by the Oxford English Dictionary as being used to denote a kind of patterned rug originally produced in the area. It is often referred to by the Armenians living in the area as Artsakh (Armenian: Template:Hayeren; Azeri: Ərsak; Russian: Арцах), meaning Woods of Aramanyak ("Tsakh" is Armenian for Woods, "Ar" is abbreviation for Aramanyak). In Azerbaijani, Ərsak means Land ("Ər"/"Ar") of Saks (Scythians), who inhabited the area. This was the name for the area from about 2nd century AD when it was part of Caucasian Albania to 13-14 centuries. Before that was the name of Orkhistene was used in the Caucasian Albania.
Geography
The region has a total area of 4,400 square kilometres (1,699 sq mi), and in 1989, it had a population of 192,000. The population at that time was mainly Armenian (76%) and Azerbaijanis (23%), with Russian and Kurdish minorities. The capital is Stepanakert (Azerbaijani: Xankəndi). Its other major city, today lying partially in ruins, is Shusha (Armenian: Shushi).
The current borders of Nagorno-Karabakh, established in Soviet times, resemble a kidney bean. The bean, whose indentation is on the east side, has very tall mountain ridges along the northern edge, along the west, and the south is just plain mountainous. The part near the indentation of the kidney bean itself is a relatively flat valley, with the two edges of the bean, the provinces of Martakert/Aghdere and Martuni/Xocavand (corresponding to parts of the Azerbaijani rayons of Kalbacar, Tartar, Aghdere and Xocavand), having flat lands as well. Other flatter valleys exist around the Sarsang reservoir, Hadrut, and the south. Much of Nagorno-Karabakh is forested, especially the mountains.
Divisions
Comparative table of current de facto divisions within Nagorno-Karabakh and correspondences with regions during Azerbaijani control of the region.
Armenian marz | Azerbaijani rayon |
---|---|
Askeran | Khankendi (city), Khojali |
Hadrut | part of Khojavend |
Martakert | parts of Kalbajar, Tartar |
Martuni | remainder of Khojavend |
Shahumian* | Naftalan (city), part of Goranboy |
Shushi | Shusha (city), Shusha |
Note: Shahumian was not part of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast set up by the Soviet Union, but rather was claimed later by Nagorno-Karabakh. It currently remains under Azerbaijani control along with some parts of Nagorno-Karabakh itself (e.g., part of Aghdere).
International status
The sovereign status of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR) is not recognized by any state, including Armenia. Three United Nations Security Council Resolutions (853, 874, and 884) refer to Nagorno-Karabakh as a region of Azerbaijan. According to a report prepared by British parliamentarian and rapporteur David Atkinson, presented to Political Affairs Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), "the borders of Azerbaijan were internationally recognised at the time of the country being recognised as independent state in 1991," and "the territory of Azerbaijan included the Nagorno-Karabakh region."
The latest resolution # 1416 adopted by PACE (), stated that “Considerable parts of the territory of Azerbaijan are still occupied by Armenian forces, and separatist forces are still in control of the Nagorno-Karabakh region”.
The resolution further stated:
- The Assembly reiterates that the occupation of foreign territory by a member state constitutes a grave violation of that state’s obligations as a member of the Council of Europe and reaffirms the right of displaced persons from the area of conflict to return to their homes safely and with dignity”.
Recalling the binding Resolutions 822 (1993), 853 (1993), 874 (1993) and 884 (1993) of the UN Security Council, PACE urged “the parties concerned to comply with them, in particular by refraining from any armed hostilities and by withdrawing military forces from any occupied territories”.
Council of Europe called on the Nagorno-Karabakh de facto authorities to refrain from staging one-sided "local self-government elections" in Nagorno-Karabakh. "These so-called 'elections' cannot be legitimate," stressed Council of Europe Committee of Ministers' Chairman and Liechtenstein Foreign Minister Ernst Walch, Parliamentary Assembly President Lord Russell-Johnston and Secretary General Walter Schwimmer. They recalled that following the 1991-1994 armed conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, a substantial part of the region's population was forced to flee their homes and are still living as displaced persons in those countries or as refugees abroad. This position was reiterated by Walter Schwimmer, Secretary General of the Council of Europe on 4 August 2004 with regard to the next elections, staged in the province.
According to a non-binding legal analysis by New England School of Law's Center for International Law & Policy, as well as Public International Law and Policy Group, "Nagorno Karabagh has a right of self-determination, including the attendant right to independence, according to the criteria recognized under international law."
The analysis further notes that NKR's
- independence was declared not from the Soviet Union but from Azerbaijan. This act fully complied with existing law. Indeed, the 1990 Soviet law titled 'Law of the USSR Concerning the Procedure of Secession of a Soviet Republic from the USSR," provides that the secession of a Soviet republic from the body of the USSR allows an autonomous region and compactly settled minority regions in the same republic's territory also to trigger its own process of independence.'
The Background Paper on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict prepared by Directorate General of Political Affairs of the Council of Europe, on the other hand, states:
- The Armenian side maintains that the N-K independence referendum was conducted in accordance with the USSR law on the "Procedure for Solving Issues of Secession of a Soviet Republic from the USSR" of 3 April 1990. Article 3 of this law provided autonomous regions within the Soviet republics with the right to determine independently, by referendum, whether they wished to remain within the USSR or join the republic seceding from the USSR. It would however seem that according to this law N-K would have the choice of two options – to remain within the USSR or to join independent Azerbaijan; N-K independence does not seem possible.
History
Main article: History of Nagorno-KarabakhThe region of Nagorno-Karabakh falls within the lands occupied by peoples known to modern archaeologists as the Kura-Araxes culture, who lived between the two rivers bearing those names. Little is known of the ancient history of the region, primarily because of the scarcity of historical sources. At various times in antiquity that are difficult to establish with precision at this time, this area was part of Aghbania, or Caucasian Albania, and at others, of Greater Armenia.
In the 7th and 8th centuries, the region was invaded by Arabs, who pillaged it and converted a portion of the population to Islam. Under the Arabs, the Albanian church was subordinated to the Armenian Church, resulting in the local Albanian population gradually becoming more like Armenians in terms of religion, culture, and language. After the 8th century, Albania diminished in size, and came to exist only as the Khachin principality in Artsakh.
In the 15th century, the territory of Karabakh was part of the states of Kara Koyunlu and then Ak Koyunlu. In the early 16th century, after the fall of the Ak-Koyunlu state, control of the region passed to the Safavid dynasty of Iran, that created a Ganje-Karabakh province (beglarbekdom, bəylərbəyliyi); and in the mid-18th century, the Karabakh khanate was formed. Karabakh passed to Imperial Russia by the Treaty of Kurekchay, signed between the Khan of Karabakh and the Russian Czar in 1805, and later further formalized with the conquest of other Azerbaijani khanates by the Treaty of Gulistan in 1813, before the rest of Transcaucasia was incorporated into the Empire in 1828 by the Treaty of Turkmenchay. In 1822, the Karabakh khanate was dissolved, and the area became part of the Elizavetpol governorate within the Russian Empire. After that Russian Empire began massive relocation of Armenian population into Karabakh region to achieve the Christian support in that region. Hundreds of families came from Turkey (Van region) to Karabakh to make a majority in population against Azeris by the turn of the 20th century.
After the Russian Revolution of 1917, Karabakh became part of the Transcaucasian Federation, but this soon dissolved into separate Armenian, Azerbaijani, and Georgian states. In 1920, Transcaucasia was taken over by the Bolsheviks who, in order to attract public support, promised they would allot Karabakh to Armenia, along with Nakhchivan and Zangezur (a strip separating Nakhichevan from Azerbaijan proper). However, Moscow also had far-reaching plans concerning Turkey -- hoping that it would, with a little help from Russia, develop along Communist lines. Needing to appease Turkey, Moscow agreed to a division that left Zangezur to Armenia, while leaving Karabakh and Nakhchivan in Azerbaijan. As a result, the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region was established within the Azerbaijan SSR in 1923.
With the beginning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the question of Nagorno-Karabakh re-emerged. Complaining about "forced Azerification" of the region, the majority Armenian population, with ideological and material support from Armenia, started a movement to transfer it to Armenia.
On February 20, 1988, Armenian deputies to the National Council of Nagorno-Karabakh voted to unify that region with Armenia. On February 24, 1988, a direct confrontation between Azerbaijanis and Armenians near Askeran (in Nagorno-Karabakh, on the road Stepanakert - Agdam) degenerated into a skirmish. Large numbers of refugees left Armenia and Azerbaijan as pogroms began against the minority populations of the respective countries. In the fall of 1989, intensified inter-ethnic conflict in and around Nagorno-Karabakh led Moscow to grant Azerbaijani authorities greater leeway in controlling that region. The Soviet policy backfired, however, when a joint session of the Armenian Supreme Soviet and the National Council, the legislative body of Nagorno-Karabakh, proclaimed the unification of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia.
In a December 1991 referendum, boycotted by local Azerbaijanis, Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh approved the creation of an independent state. A Soviet proposal for enhanced autonomy for Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan satisfied neither side, and a land war subsequently erupted between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
The struggle over Nagorno-Karabakh escalated after both Armenia and Azerbaijan attained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. In the post-Soviet power vacuum, military action between Azerbaijan and Armenia was heavily influenced by the Russian military.
By the end of 1993, the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh had caused thousands of casualties and created hundreds of thousands of refugees on both sides. By May 1994 the Armenian were in control of 20 percent of the territory of Azerbaijan. At that stage the Government of Azerbaijan for the first time during the entire duration of the conflict recognised Nagorno-Karabakh as a third party of the war and started direct negotiations with the Karabakhi authorities. As a result, an unofficial cease-fire was reached on May 12, 1994, through Russian negotiation, and continues today.
Human rights
280,000 persons—virtually all ethnic Armenians who fled Azerbaijan during the 1988-1993 war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh—were living in refugee-like circumstances in Armenia. Some left the country, principally to Russia. Their children born in Armenia acquire citizenship automatically. Their numbers are thus subject to constant decline due to death, departure, and de-registration required for naturalization. Of these, about 250,000 fled Azerbaijan-proper (areas outside Nagorno-Karabakh); approximately 30,000 came from Nagorno-Karabakh, which is in Azerbaijan but controlled by Armenians. All were registered with the government as refugees at year’s end.
The Nagorno Karabakh conflict also has resulted in the displacement of 528,000 Azerbaijanis from Armenian controlled territories including Nagorno Karabakh, and 186,000 Azeris, 18,000 Kurds and 3500 Russians fled from Armenia to Azerbaijan from 1988 to 1989. The Azerbaijani government has estimated that 63 percent of IDPs lived below the poverty line as compared to 49 percent of the total population. About 154,000 lived in the capital, Baku. According to the International Organization for Migration, 40,000 IDPs lived in camps, 60,000 in underground dugout shelters, and 20,000 in railway cars. Forty-thousand IDPs lived in EU-funded settlements and UNHCR provided housing for another 40,000. Another 5,000 IDPs lived in schools. Others lived in trains, on roadsides in half-constructed buildings, or in public buildings such as tourist and health facilities. Tens of thousands lived in seven tent camps where poor water supply and sanitation caused gastro-intestinal infections, tuberculosis, and malaria.
The Azerbaijani government has been reluctant to integrate the IDP's into the rest of the population lest others interpret it as acceptance of the permanent loss of Nagorno-Karabakh. The government required IDPs to register their place of residence in a vestige of the Soviet-era propiska system and only allowed them to live in approved areas. IDPs could receive assistance only in the camps or settlements where the Government initially assigned them, limiting their ability to look for work. Many were from rural areas and found it difficult to integrate into the urban labor market. A 2002 Law on Grants hindered humanitarian access by imposing a 27 percent tax on the wages of NGO employees and requiring notice of all grants. Many international humanitarian agencies reduced or ceased assistance for IDPs.. The infant mortality among displaced children is 3-4 times higher than in the rest of the population. The rate of stillbirth was 88.2 per 1,000 live born babies among the internally displaced people. The majority of the displaced have continued to live in difficult conditions for more than 12 years. .
References
Footnotes
- Council on Foreign Relations - Nagorno-Karabakh: The Crisis in the Caucasus
- Chapters from the Russian version of the book "Black Garden" (In Russian)
- BBC News - Regions and territories: Nagorno-Karabakh
- Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia, v. 7, p. 26, Yerevan 1981
- Azerb.com - Regions
- US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants. World Refugee Survey; Armenia Country Report. 2001.
- Chapters from the Russian version of the book "Black Garden" (In Russian)
- World Refugee Survey: Azerbaijan report 2005
- Global IDP Project: Proifle of Internal Displacement: Azerbaijan. May 2003 (as a PDF file)
General
- AzerbaijanThis image is available from the United States Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division under the digital ID {{{id}}}
This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Misplaced Pages:Copyrights for more information.
See also
- Artsakh
- Irredentism
- Geostrategy in Central Asia
- Sumgait massacre
- Khojaly massacre
- Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army
- Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
External links
Non partisan sources
- Regions and territories: Nagorno-Karabakh from the BBC
- COE - "The conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region dealt with by the OSCE Minsk Conference" Report by rapporteur David Atkinson presented to Political Affairs Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
- USIP - Sovereignty after Empire Self-Determination Movements in the Former Soviet Union. Case Studies: Nagorno-Karabakh. by Galina Starovoitova, Publication of the USIP
- USIP - Nagorno-Karabakh Searching for a Solution: Key points, by Patricia Carley, Publication of the United States Institute of Peace (USIP)
- Interview with Thomas De Waal
UN Security Council Resolutions
Resolutions passed by the United Nations Security Council relating to the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.
- UN Security Council Resolution # 822, adopted on 30 April 1993
- UN Security Council Resolution # 853, adopted on 29 July 1993
- UN Security Council Resolution # 874, adopted on 14 October 1993
- UN Security Council Resolution # 884, adopted on 12 November 1993
- All UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh from US State department
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Resolutions
Resolutions passed by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe relating to the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.
From an Armenian perspective
- Official site of the Nagorno-Karabakh government
- Official site of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- "Azat Artsakh" Daily Newspaper in Nagorno-Karabakh
- De Facto News Agency
From an Azerbaijani perspective
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan republic
- Artsakh.com
- Karabakh.org
- Karabakh.co.uk - thorough history and facts
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