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War-torn region gets a lift from Armenian exiles

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  • War-torn region gets a lift from Armenian exiles

    Washington Post
    Aug 26 2007


    War-torn region gets a lift from Armenian exiles

    By Hasmik Lazarian
    Reuters
    Sunday, August 26, 2007; 7:38 PM

    STEPANAKERT, Azerbaijan (Reuters) - The unrecognized Caucasian
    statelet of Nagorno-Karabakh, almost completely penned in by a
    military and economic blockade, is enjoying an unlikely boom thanks
    to the patriotism of Armenia's foreign diaspora.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave inside Azerbaijan with a majority ethnic
    Armenian population, declared independence in 1991 as the Soviet
    Union fell apart. It drove out Azerbaijan's troops in a war that
    claimed 35,000 lives over six years.


    Today, it runs its own affairs but has no international recognition.
    Under blockade from Azerbaijan, with which it is still technically at
    war, its only practical connection with the outside world is through
    the Lachin Corridor -- a strip of a land with a single major road
    linking it to Armenia.

    But its situation has struck a chord with the millions of ethnic
    Armenians in France, the United States and Australia, who feel it is
    their vocation to help.

    "I swore an oath to help my motherland and my conscience is clear
    because I am doing my duty," said Jack Abolakian, a 74-year-old from
    Australia, who first came to Nagorno-Karabakh seven years ago on a
    four-day holiday with his wife.

    He struggled to find anywhere to stay, and when he did, conditions
    were primitive. He decided to open a hotel in the capital,
    Stepanakert.

    A few months later, the Hotel Nairi opened on the site of a
    kindergarten destroyed in the war. With 46 rooms offering Internet
    access and satellite television, and a tennis court, it provided a
    level of luxury unheard of in Stepanakert.

    Abolakian, who divides his time between Nagorno-Karabakh and his
    construction firm in Australia, is now planning to build a housing
    development in the city.

    "We're happy with our business. If you compare it with the amount of
    money we put in, it's a success," said Abolakian, who was born in
    Syria after his family fled what is now Turkey.

    BROADER STRUGGLE

    But most of the investors who come to Nagorno-Karabakh are seeking
    more than just financial gain.

    The region has a powerful pull for the Armenian diaspora because many
    see it as part of a broader struggle for survival by a tiny, ancient
    Christian nation surrounded by Muslim neighbors.

    Among those tying their lives to the region is Vardeks Anivyan, from
    San Francisco, who has opened a dairy plant.

    An entrepreneur from Russia has opened a wood processing factory
    while Armond Tahmazyan, a 41-year-old ethnic Armenian born in Iran,
    has set up a chain of gift shops.

    Investors such as these have helped Nagorno-Karabakh notch up annual
    economic growth averaging 15 percent in the past five years.

    Because of its isolation and precarious legal status, the region of
    about 140,000 people is unlikely to become a major business magnet in
    the near future. It depends on an annual loan of about $60 million
    from Armenia to stay afloat.

    About 1.5 million Armenians were killed in Ottoman Turkey early last
    century in what Armenians call a genocide, although Turkey rejects
    the term.

    Most of the Armenian diaspora around the world can trace their
    origins to ancestors who fled the killings.

    Many of them saw the war over Nagorno-Karabakh, known in Armenian as
    "Artsakh," as a continuation of that conflict: an Armenian community
    fighting for survival against Azeris, who have close linguistic and
    cultural ties to the Turks.

    Azerbaijan denies the region was historically Armenian. It says the
    fighting drove out about a million Azeris from Nagorno-Karabakh and
    surrounding districts. Many still live in refugee camps.

    "Any actions by any companies or organizations on the territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh have no legal force," said Hazar Ibrahim, press
    secretary in Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry.

    "Their work in the occupied territories contradicts the norms and
    principles both of international law and Azerbaijan's legislation."

    That has not dissuaded diaspora Armenians. A handful of them fought
    with the separatists in the war. Since a 1994 ceasefire, the region
    has become a place of pilgrimage for Armenians from around the world.

    A telethon last year in Los Angeles raised $13.7 million for
    development and infrastructure projects in Nagorno-Karabakh from
    communities across the United States and elsewhere.

    Tahmazyan, the Iranian-Armenian businessman, moved to Stepanakert
    eight years ago. Married to an Australian woman, he now runs the
    successful Nreni chain of souvenir shops, and has no plans to leave:

    "We are staying here ... God willing."

    (Additional reporting by Lada Yevgrashina in Baku)

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conten t/article/2007/08/26/AR2007082601042.html
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