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Lachin: The Emptying Lands

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  • Lachin: The Emptying Lands

    LACHIN: THE EMPTYING LANDS
    By Onnik Krikorian in Lachin

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    Sept 28 2006

    Landmines, neglect and uncertainty result in an Armenian exodus from
    strategic corridor.

    Suarassy, a mine-infested region.

    Relics of war, south of Lachin.

    Growing up in Ditsmayri, near Zangelan, Kashatagh Region.

    What is left of the village of Malibeyli. All photographs by Onnik
    Krikorian.

    The local residents of Suarassy seem oblivious to the hidden danger
    as they herd cattle down a road known to have been mined during the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani war of the early Nineties. Despite the mangled
    military lorry rusting in a ditch to one side, none of their cows
    have so far detonated seven anti-tank mines still believed to be
    buried underneath, so they reckon the road is safe.

    Less than a metre away is forest and grazing land laden with at
    least 900 anti-personnel landmines. Yura Sharamanian, operations
    officer for the HALO Trust, compares the minefield to Cambodia and
    says that the British de-mining charity considers Lachin to be the
    most mine-infested region in Karabakh and surrounding regions, which
    were fought over during the 1991-4 war.

    Although considered by the international community to be occupied
    Azerbaijani land, this territory is now marked on Armenian maps as
    Kashatagh. Also including the formerly Azerbaijani regions of Kubatly
    and Zangelan as well as Lachin itself, Kashatagh stretches down to
    the Iranian border in the south.

    This strip of land between Armenia and Karabakh is one of the key
    points in dispute in the unresolved Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

    And it is also home to a few thousand hardy Armenian settlers who
    have moved here since the 1994 ceasefire.

    However, it is not just the danger of landmines that threatens the
    existence of new settlements in the Kashatagh region. Although a 2005
    census put the official population of Kashatagh at 9,800 Armenians,
    with 2,200 residing in the town of Lachin, the actual figure is now
    believed to be around fifty per cent less.

    Five years ago, Kashatagh's population was estimated by local
    officials to be approximately 15,000. Before the Karabakh war, the
    three Azerbaijani regions of Lachin, Kubatly and Zangelan had 129,000
    residents, with over 60,000 Azerbaijanis and ethnic Kurds living in
    the Lachin region alone.

    Officials in the administrative town of Lachin, now renamed Berdzor,
    are reluctant to admit out loud that these reports are true, but
    privately confirm that the number of settlers is far below that
    officially quoted. None estimate the population at over 6,000 and
    most soon forget to maintain the official line that most of the new
    settlers are refugees from Azerbaijan. Instead, they admit that most
    are from Armenia proper.

    Zorik Irkoyan, chief specialist at the education department for the
    new Kashatagh region, for example, is a journalist from Yerevan who
    was involved in the military operation to take the town. He says that
    few refugees were among most of the new arrivals in Kashatagh.

    "Not many came because they were used to their life in Baku and
    Sumgait [in Azerbaijan]," he said. "Many now feel safer in Armenia,
    and like a million other Armenians, some have left for Russia. Some
    might have moved here because of the social conditions in Armenia
    although others did not. I can't guarantee that I will always live
    in Lachin, but there is a connection with this land."

    Some new arrivals are indeed refugees from Azerbaijan and Karabakh,
    as well as the Diaspora, but most are vulnerable families from
    Armenia. They were attracted by the promise of land, livestock and
    social benefits averaging 4,000 Armenian drams (about ten US dollars)
    per child.

    But, since 2004, residents of Lachin say that government money is
    being reduced and people are moving away. Even Robert Matevosian, head
    of resettlement for Kashatagh, admits, "Recent reports [highlighting
    out-migration] are raising various issues and concerns that do exist."

    Samuel Kocharian, director of the AGAPE Children's Home that
    accommodates socially vulnerable children, is more open. "The process
    of resettlement started on a large scale at the beginning because
    of patriotism," he said, "but now, with the same enthusiasm and on
    the same scale, Kashatagh is emptying." Like others in the region,
    he estimates the population of the region to be about 5-6,000 people.

    The most likely reason is not hard to spot. In the ongoing peace
    negotiations over the future of Nagorny Karabakh, the Armenian
    government seems committed to returning almost all of the seven
    territories surrounding Karabakh currently under Armenian control. In
    the event of a deal, Lachin is set to remain as the crucial land link
    between Armenia and Karabakh - but it remains uncertain how wide the
    "Lachin Corridor" would actually be.

    This is bad news for those Armenian nationalists who want to resettle
    the Kashatagh region - although it will encourage those who support
    a peace settlement as it means relatively few Armenians will have to
    make way for returning Azerbaijanis under a future deal.

    The region is now administered by the internationally-unrecognised
    Nagorny Karabakh Republic. Kocharian says the Armenian and Karabakh
    authorities do not want settlements outside a 20-30 km radius of
    Lachin and are obviously reluctant to finance any new construction
    projects, saying that only a small amount of the 750 million drams
    (around 1.7 million dollars) allocated to the entire region for house
    construction has actually been spent.

    Moreover, while many homes in Lachin proper have been refurbished at
    the expense of the local authorities, little or nothing has happened
    in the villages. Sources in the Kashatagh administration speaking to
    IWPR on condition of anonymity confirm this.

    Others also say that initial promises to provide free electricity up
    to 200 kw per month for two years to new arrivals were broken at the
    beginning of the year. Gagik Kosakian, deputy governor of the region,
    does not deny this, saying, "Electricity used to be cheaper than it
    is today and this allowance was stopped at the beginning of 2006.

    However, electricity is still cheaper than in Armenia."

    Karegah, three km from Lachin, has been presented to visitors as a
    model village in the region, but its head, Marine Petoyan, is concerned
    about its future. Sixty per cent of the village comprising 65 mainly
    refugee families has no water, and 25 families have already had their
    electricity cut off because of non-payment of outstanding debts.

    "There was also a bus for schoolchildren which was used by others as
    well, but it's been six months since it last operated," she said. "No
    money for petrol was provided."

    On September 28, Jirair Sefilian, a former military commander from
    the Karabakh war, called for the resignation of Kashatagh governor
    Hamlet Khachatrian for alleged mismanagement, saying that 52 villages
    in the region had neither electricity nor water.

    IWPR was detained and prevented from visiting other villages
    surrounding Lachin by officers of the Nagorny Karabakh National
    Security Service, NSS. Samvel Kocharian says he believes this was
    because "conditions were very bad in those villages [in 2001], but you
    should understand that they don't even exist now. The further away
    you get from Berdzor [Lachin] the more they are forgotten and the
    remotest villages are in a really bad condition. The closest regions
    of Goris in Armenia and Hadrut in Karabakh have grown and developed
    in the past ten years, but there's been no change here.

    "When the living conditions are improving there, and when people are
    lied to for 12 years with promises that a house will be built for
    them one day, it's only natural that they want to leave."

    Onnik Krikorian is a British-born freelance journalist
    living and working in Armenia. He has a blog from Armenia
    at http://oneworld.blogsome.com with many photographs from
    Lachin/Kashatagh.
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