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Armenia and Azerbaijan still skirting war in Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • Armenia and Azerbaijan still skirting war in Nagorno-Karabakh

    Armenia and Azerbaijan still skirting war in Nagorno-Karabakh

    Since the mid-1990s, the tiny territory of Nagorno-Karabakh with about
    160,000 people has become a `frozen conflict' zone despite rounds of
    peace talks to settle its status.

    Toronto Star
    Wed Feb 20
    2013

    By: Olivia Ward, Foreign Affairs Reporter

    In the 1990s, the aftershocks of the Soviet Union's collapse kept on
    coming in the fractious southern Caucasus.

    Georgia fought two separatist wars. Russia battled Chechen rebels. And
    the tiny disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh exploded into conflict
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    In the 21st century, two out of the three - Georgia and Chechnya -
    went back to war. And this week - on the 25th anniversary of a vote
    that launched two decades of unresolved ethnic strife in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a leading expert on the little known region says it
    could be next.

    `The risk may seem relatively low,' said Thomas de Waal of the
    Carnegie Endowment, `but the only thing that is stopping a war is the
    leaders' own calculation.'

    Nagorno-Karabakh was shared for centuries by Muslim Azeris and
    Christian Armenians. But after the First World War, the newly-formed
    Soviet Union created a largely Armenian autonomous region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh within the republic of Azerbaijan. In February 1988,
    the local Soviet parliament for Karabakh voted to join Armenia,
    touching off an inter-ethnic explosion.

    Some 30,000 people died in conflicts that left ethnic Armenians as
    victors, who occupied new territory in Azerbaijan to create a buffer
    zone and corridor linking Karabakh and Armenia. The enclave was
    declared an independent - but unrecognized - republic.

    War broke out again, and pogroms of Armenians and Azeris forced both
    groups to flee their homes. A Russian-brokered ceasefire ended the
    fighting in 1994. But more than 1 million ethnic Azeris and Armenians
    still cannot return home.

    Since then, the tiny territory of about 160,000 people - one-fifth the
    area of Nova Scotia - has become a `frozen conflict' zone despite
    rounds of peace talks to settle its status.

    Meanwhile, said de Waal, Azerbaijan has become an economic oil giant
    in the region, but with a democratic deficit. President Ilham Aliyev's
    regime is using its new-found wealth to equip and expand the army. It
    is also ratcheting up tensions with anti-Armenian rhetoric.

    In one of the most extreme cases, 75-year-old writer Akram Aylisli was
    burnt in effigy for a book he wrote to heal relations between ethnic
    Azerbaijanis and Armenians, and a pro-government party offered a
    $13,000 bounty for cutting off his ear.

    `Azerbaijan doesn't want a compromise with people who `stole our
    land,' ' de Waal said last week at University of Toronto's Munk
    Centre. `It spends $4 billion a year on its army.'

    As Karabakh Armenians see themselves losing the arms race, some favour
    a `knockout blow' against Azerbaijan before the point of no return is
    reached.

    `There's also the possibility of an accidental war started along the
    ceasefire line - one day someone could lob a mortar shell across it,'
    said de Waal. In an uneasy neighbourhood that includes traditional
    foes Iran, Turkey and Russia, a renewed conflict could have a ripple
    effect.

    Both sides routinely attend sporadic peace talks and say they want a
    peace deal. But with Azerbaijan demanding a return of Karabakh, with
    some autonomy, and Armenia insisting on independence, it's unlikely to
    happen soon.

    `There are perfectly sensible plans for peace, but there have to be
    basic levels of trust,' de Waal said. `Now there's a lack of both
    trust and interaction.'

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