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NKR: Liberated Territories In Light Of Human Rights

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  • NKR: Liberated Territories In Light Of Human Rights

    LIBERATED TERRITORIES IN LIGHT OF HUMAN RIGHTS
    Hovanes Asrian

    Azat Artsakh, Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
    10 April 2006

    The question of liberated territories of Artsakh cannot be viewed
    apart from the human rights factors. The most essential of these
    is the right of people for self-determination. As characterized by
    the UN Human Rights Commission, the right for self-determination
    is essential to the encouragement and development of individual
    human rights. The right for self-determination is set down in the UN
    Conventions, the International Bill of Human Rights, the International
    Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant
    on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, as well as a series of other
    international agreements and documents. Being one of the main rights
    and having a practical role in geopolitical processes, the right
    for self-determination is also widely and constantly manipulated
    and distorted by countries and international organizations. A more
    popular distortion is when it is opposed to the territorial integrity
    of countries. If viewed from the aspect of law, this opposition becomes
    groundless and illegal. Different experts have covered this question,
    therefore we will dwell on other questions, related to the liberated
    territories of Artsakh. The problem of liberated territories should
    be viewed from the beginning, i.e. the division of Armenia in 1921. In
    1921, under the March 16 agreement of Moscow and October 13 agreement
    of Kars, as well as the July 5 decision of the Plenum of the Caucasian
    Bureau of Central Committee of the Communist Proletarian Party of
    Russia, a major part of East Armenia was annexed to the Turkic states
    of Turkey and Azerbaijan. This was done with an overt violation of the
    right for self-determination, and was accompanied by crimes against the
    humanity, massacres, assassinations, extermination, and displacement
    of people. These crimes perpetuated until the liberation of Artsakh.

    It is notable that the Central Committee of Azerbaijani Communist
    Party was instructed to draw the borders of the region of Artsakh
    (the Autonomous Region of Nagorno Karabakh). Thus, the territories,
    disputed at various international organizations, are the result of
    the division of Armenia and Artsakh.

    >From this point of view, these organizations may be driven by political
    interests and motives in accepting the borders drawn under Stalin, but
    legally and morally this is not reasonable and valid. It is obvious
    that the Artsakh was joined to Azerbaijan against the will of the
    native people, encroaching upon their right for self-determination,
    and in law this is annexation. All the other territories inside
    the Autonomous Region of Nagorno Karabakh and outside its "borders"
    have the same status. These are illegally annexed and later partly
    liberated territories, and now are an indivisible part of Nagorno
    Karabakh Republic. The annexation of these territories by Azerbaijan
    for several decades cannot act as a legal factor to underlie the
    territorial claims of Azerbaijan. Still at the time of division
    of Armenia the principle "Ex injuria non oritus jus" worked in
    international law. In other words, no right emanates from limitations
    if the state of things is the result of illegal actions.

    Therefore the attempts of Azerbaijanis to refer to the documents on
    Soviet administrative divisions are groundless. First, the annexation
    of Artsakh was illegal, second, the law was violated by the Soviet
    government, and third, by the October 18, 1991 constitutional act
    on the independence of the Republic of Azerbaijan Azerbaijan was
    declared the successor of the first Azerbaijani republic (1918-1920)
    and not Soviet Azerbaijan, and Karabakh has never been part of the
    first Azerbaijani republic. The constant violation of the right for
    self-determination of the people of Artsakh since 1921 was ended
    by the proclamation of NKR in 1991 and the liberation of part of
    these territories. Returning these territories to Azerbaijan would
    mean returning the situation when human rights were constantly
    violated. Countries are to honour human rights and abstain from
    actions of violating these rights. Therefore, countries, including
    the Republic of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh Republic, must never
    consider any question of possibility or adequacy of violating human
    rights. Moreover, under Articles 55-56 of the UN Conventions the
    members of the UN must honour the equality of peoples, their right
    for self-determination, basic human rights and freedoms. In addition,
    under the principles of the international law on friendship and
    partnership of states, countries must abstain from actions involving
    force, that deprive peoples of their right for self-determination,
    otherwise the declaration provides for the right to solicit and accept
    assistance from other countries. Besides, this declaration points
    out that each country must assist in the fulfilment of the principle
    of equal rights and the right for self-determination of peoples. In
    debates on the Karabakh state and the liberated territories of Artsakh
    countries often use the formula-motto "resolution without winners and
    losers", which would not fit into the real essence of the problem. The
    Azerbaijani mini-empire simply lost part of its annexed territories in
    the result of the establishment of NKR and liberation of some annexed
    territories. Hence, presenting Azerbaijan as a loser gives birth to
    and nourishes revenge in this country, and Azerbaijan draws farther
    from the settlement of the problem. After the independence of colonies
    a colonial country cannot be considered a loser, because annexation
    and colonization are generally against the law. The countries of
    Western Europe, losing their colonies in the past decades, did not
    become losers and are not trying to return the countries that became
    independent. Lasting peace in the region is possible through resolution
    of problems on the basis of the international law.
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