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  • Fire Fight Over Karabakh

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    July 7 2006

    Fire Fight Over Karabakh

    Armenians and Azerbaijanis accuse each other of deliberately starting
    blazes on disputed land, while others blame the heat of a dry summer.

    By Rufat Abbasov in Baku, Karine Ohanian in Stepanakert and Karine
    Asatrian in Strasbourg (CRS No. 347, 6-July-06)

    A series of wildfires raging on lands around Nagorny Karabakh have
    sparked a new war of words in the unresolved territorial dispute
    between Azerbaijanis and Armenians.

    The Azerbaijani authorities accused the Armenians of deliberately
    starting fires in areas to the east of Karabakh which, although they
    are not part of the disputed territory itself, have been under the
    de facto control of Armenian forces since the ceasefire of 1994.

    No one lives in these territories, but the lands are cultivated by
    Armenian farmers from Karabakh.

    Azerbaijan's environment ministry says more than 132 square kilometres
    of land has been burned, causing damage estimated at around five
    million US dollars. Azerbaijani environmentalists have named six
    villages in the Aghdam region east of Karabakh which they say have
    been razed to the ground.

    The Armenian authorities in Karabakh have rejected these charges,
    saying that the fires have either occurred naturally as a result of
    drought conditions, or have been started by negligent local people -
    or caused by gunfire from the Azerbaijani side of the ceasefire line.

    Igbal Agazade, a member of the Azerbaijani parliament who visited
    the ceasefire line that divides the two sides, said the fires were
    "nothing other than mass arson".

    He told IWPR, "This is not a whim of nature, but a continuation of
    the Armenians' policy of destroying all evidence that Karabakh is
    indigenous Azerbaijani land. If that wasn't the case, the fires would
    also be happening on lands controlled by the Azerbaijanis where the
    climatic conditions are identical.

    "The Armenians are doing this deliberately to destroy our graveyards
    and historical monuments. The historic Nargiz-Tepe monument, which
    is more than 2,000 years old, has already been wiped off the face of
    the earth. This is ecological terrorism."

    These allegations are denied by the authorities in Nagorny Karabakh,
    a republic that is unrecognised by the international community.

    "At this time of year, fires in the wheatfields are nothing out of
    the ordinary for Nagorny Karabakh, and they occur for very different
    reasons," Vahram Baghdasarian, Karabakh's agriculture minister,
    told IWPR. "But this year, the number and extent of the fires in the
    wheatfields in zones bordering Azerbaijan has increased somewhat as
    a consequence of shooting from the Azerbaijani side, using tracer
    bullets which can start a fire instantly."

    David Mikaelian, press spokesman for the government in Stepanakert
    (which the Azerbaijanis call Khankendi), added, "In this season when
    the temperature rises to 40 degrees and more, it is natural that
    there are fires in the fields - it does not mean they were started
    deliberately. But we do have information that Azerbaijani soldiers
    are responsible for arson in these areas."

    Mikaelian said the local fire service had been deployed to extinguish
    the fires. The emergency services department in Stepanakert said that
    it had recorded 128 fires this season, and that the fire service had
    been sent out to deal with all of them. Spokesman Armen Narimanian
    said more than 1,000 hectares of uncultivated land and 165 hectares
    of harvested land had been burned.

    Masis Mailian, deputy foreign minister of the unrecognised republic,
    told IWPR that it had been hard for the fire services to put out the
    blazes because shots fired by the Azerbaijanis created fears for the
    safety of the firemen.

    The Karabakh authorities released a statement on July 3, saying that
    Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, who has acted as the main international
    monitor of the ceasefire line for the last nine years, in his capacity
    as representative of the chairman of the Organisation for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe, had just conducted a monitoring mission in
    the Aghdam area and had seen no evidence that population centres had
    been burned - as alleged by the Azerbaijanis - but had seen traces
    of a fire that began on the Azerbaijani side of the ceasefire line.

    In complete contradiction to this, an Azerbaijani defence ministry
    spokesman said the OSCE ambassador had "literally with his own eyes"
    witnessed proof of deliberate arson by the Armenians.

    Ambassador Kasprzyk could not be contacted by IWPR for clarification.

    Matthew Bryza, United States deputy assistant Secretary of State
    and chief negotiator on the Karabakh conflict, told the day.az news
    agency in Azerbaijan that he was "worried" by the reports and had seen
    satellite photographs on which "the boundaries of the fires... are
    so distinct that it looks as though someone had thought in advance
    how to start them and how far the fires should spread".

    Bryza said he was reserving judgement until Ambassador Kasprzyk made
    his report.

    On June 27, the Azerbaijani delegation at the Council of Europe
    in Strasbourg issued a statement accusing the Armenians of "mass
    arson on the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, as a result of which
    thousands of hectares of territory were destroyed, doing great damage
    to the environment. The flames also spread onto territory under the
    control of Azerbaijan. Fauna, buildings and cultural monuments on
    these territories were completely destroyed".

    In response, Heghine Naghdalian, a delegate from Armenia, said,
    "The Azerbaijanis don't understand that fires do not recognise
    administrative boundaries.

    "The Azerbaijanis speak about deliberate fires in the territories
    adjoining Nagorny Karabakh without understanding that the Karabakhis
    cannot set fire to those fields and woods which they use for their
    own needs."

    Naghdalian claimed the matter was being raised to distract attention
    from an issue that Armenia has raised at the Council of Europe -
    the alleged destruction of the medieval Armenian cemetery of Djugha
    in Nakhichevan, Azerbaijan.

    Azerbaijani parliamentary deputy Malahat Hasanova gave another version
    of events to IWPR, saying that the Armenians were carrying out a
    "scorched earth policy" as they understood that they would soon be
    abandoning these territories and wanted to leave behind dead and
    burned lands.

    However, not everyone is inclined to see a political subtext to the
    fires. Many farmers questioned by IWPR said fires were a perennial
    problem in the region.

    "One carelessly-dropped cigarette, and a fire starts immediately," said
    Larisa Danielian who lives in the village of Shahbulakh in Karabakh.

    Leonid Soghomonian, who lives in the village of Berdashen in the
    Martuni district, reported "the burning of a large amount of weeds
    standing more than two metres high weeds on the border, which block
    visibility between Karabakhi and Azerbaijani soldiers".

    Soghomonian said that the weeds were burned by soldiers on both sides
    to give them a better view of their adversaries, and that many such
    fires had been started over the past few years.

    "But when a fire like this starts up, it's impossible to stop it -
    the grass is very dry, and it spreads very quickly. And as our crops
    are directly next to the border, many of the owners of cultivated
    land have suffered badly from the fires and lost 10 or 15 hectares
    of their harvest."

    Rufat Abbasov is a journalist and IWPR contributor in Baku. Karine
    Ohanian is a freelance journalist working in Nagorny Karabakh. Karine
    Asatrian is a correspondent for A1+ television.
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