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Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: Azeris dream of return

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  • Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: Azeris dream of return

    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: Azeris dream of return

    8 January 2015 Last updated at 12:44

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    Cross-border skirmishes have killed troops on both sides, as Rayhan
    Demytrie reports

    Continue reading the main story

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    Helicopter downing threatens truce
    Nagorno-Karabakh profile

    The "frozen" Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is still simmering in the
    Caucasus, disrupting the lives of thousands of people. The BBC's
    Rayhan Demytrie reports from Azerbaijan on hardship near the front
    line.

    Gulay likes to play outside, like any other seven-year-old. She rocks
    back and forth on a wooden swing. Playtime ought to be safe, but she
    lives in a conflict zone.

    Gulay's home lies on the edge of the Azeri village of Gazyan, close to
    the line of contact with Armenian forces.

    Shooting incidents are common here.

    Her father Zomig Ahundov points to a thick brick wall built by the Red
    Cross to help shield his home from bullets.

    "We still can't use the second floor of our house - it's too
    dangerous. We are a family of five people and we all live in one room
    downstairs because it's safer," Zomig says.

    Walk into any house in this village and people will show cracks in
    their buildings which, they say, come from nearby explosions of
    Armenian ordnance, or bullet holes in their walls.

    Locals in Gazyan blame some damage to buildings on shots from the Armenian side
    Arch-enemies

    Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war over the disputed, mountainous
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s.

    The autonomous republic within Azerbaijan - created during Soviet rule
    - was populated mainly by ethnic Armenians. They wanted union with
    Armenia when the Soviet Union broke up.

    As many as 30,000 people were killed in the war. Azerbaijan lost the
    territory as well as seven adjacent regions. Hundreds of thousands of
    people were displaced.

    The conflict has ancient roots dating back to rivalry between
    Christian Armenians and Turkic Muslims.

    Little progress has been made towards a lasting settlement since a
    ceasefire deal reached in 1994.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is often referred to as a "frozen" conflict but
    military and civilian casualties are frequently reported.

    Tensions escalated last summer, with skirmishes and casualties on both
    sides. In November, Azeri forces downed an Armenian helicopter. Three
    servicemen were killed.

    Armenian authorities said they were on an unarmed mission, and vowed
    to retaliate.

    Armenia's defence ministry spokesman, Artsrun Hovhannisyan, warned of
    consequences "that will be very painful for the Azerbaijani side and
    will remain on the conscience of the military-political leadership of
    Azerbaijan".

    But Azerbaijan takes a different view.

    "Two enemy helicopters attacked our positions. As a result one of the
    helicopters was shot down," says Azerbaijan's Deputy Defence Minister,
    Lt Gen Kerim Veliyev.

    "We've sent our message that if such air actions continue, any enemy
    target will be destroyed. We are not eliminating the military option.
    If the enemy rejects a peaceful solution we can free our territories
    militarily. We are ready for that."

    Peace deal?

    Azerbaijan's leadership has repeatedly threatened to take back the
    lost lands. Last August, President Ilham Aliyev tweeted that "the flag
    of Azerbaijan will fly in all the occupied territories".

    Peace negotiations mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group, co-chaired by
    Russia, France and the United States, have seen little progress.
    Meanwhile, oil-rich Azerbaijan has been spending heavily to boost its
    military capability.

    The country's annual defence budget stands at $3.7bn (£2.5bn).
    Armenia's defence budget was $447m in 2013.

    According to the latest Global Militarisation Index, published by the
    German think tank Bonn International Centre for Conversion (BICC),
    Armenia and Azerbaijan are among the top 10 most militarised nations
    in the world.

    Both countries buy their weapons from Russia. But while there is a
    risk of renewed conflict, Russia's involvement makes the military
    option less likely, according to political analyst Arastun Orujlu of
    the East-West Research Centre in Baku.

    "I don't think the Azerbaijani government is preparing for a military
    resolution of the Karabakh conflict. They are quite realistic. Armenia
    is a military ally of Russia at least for the next 48 years. It has
    two Russian bases on its territory," he said, referring to the long
    leases agreed for the bases.

    However, Mr Orujlu says the Azeri authorities are watching the
    instability in Ukraine closely.

    "Azerbaijan sometimes feels itself alone on an international level," he says.

    "For supporting separatists in eastern Ukraine, Russia is getting
    strong [Western] sanctions. And Azeris are asking, 'Why doesn't
    Armenia get the same reaction from the international community?'
    That's what makes the Karabakh conflict more significant today."

    New apartments on the edge of Baku now house people displaced by the war
    Azeri children learn of the lost areas at an early age in school
    New homes

    On the outskirts of the capital Baku, new housing complexes are
    appearing for thousands of families displaced by the conflict.

    Azerbaijan has one of the highest rates of internally displaced people
    (IDPs) in the world.

    After years of people living in rundown Soviet-era buildings and tent
    cities lacking running water, the government launched a state
    programme to rehouse IDPs.

    New apartment blocks give a sense of permanence to the status quo. But
    anyone in the street will tell you that they still dream of going
    home.

    "The houses are really nice but we want to go back to our land as soon
    as possible," says Naringul Guliyeva, walking her grandson to a nearby
    newly built school.

    There, the children learn to recite the names of the seven regions
    occupied by Armenia.

    They are taught about their right to return - even if it will take
    war, or another generation of waiting, to achieve it.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-30718551

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