Nagorno-Karabakh’s 120,000 Armenians will leave for Armenia, leadership says

As Azerbaijan reclaims Nagorno-Karabakh, the vast majority of Armenians living there will leave, authorities have said. The region’s de-facto leadership has said it is unclear when they will be able to flee for Armenia.

Armenians say they are set to leave following Azerbaijan’s reclaiming of Nagorno-Karabakh

Almost all the 120,000 Armenians living in war-torn Nagorno-Karabakh will leave for Armenia, the region’s de-facto leadership has said, after Azerbaijan regained control of the breakaway region.

The Armenians of Karabakh were forced to declare a ceasefire on Wednesday as Azeri forces reclaimed the territory following a 24-hour offensive.

The US and EU have expressed “deep concerns” for the Armenians in Karabakh, which is recognised internationally as part of Azerbaijan but had been under Armenian control since the fall of the Soviet Union.

Armenians say they fear repression and ethnic cleansing – allegations strongly denied by Azerbaijan.

David Babayan, an adviser to Samvel Shahramanyan, the president of the self-styled Republic of Artsakh, which is the Armenian name for the region, has warned of a mass exodus and says his people will not be part of Azerbaijan.

“Our people do not want to live as part of Azerbaijan, 99.9% prefer to leave our historic lands,” he said. “The fate of our poor people will go down in history as a disgrace and a shame for the Armenian people and for the whole civilised world.”

He said it was unclear when the Armenians would move down the Lachin corridor, which links the territory to Armenia, where Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has faced calls to resign for failing to save Karabakh.

Meanwhile, long-awaited aid has arrived in the region following a nine-month blockade imposed by Azerbaijan, which dwindled the Armenians’ food, fuel and medical supplies.

Azerbaijan has repeatedly said no harm will come to civilians – though reports suggest some may have died and residential buildings were damaged during the latest attack.

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The country’s ambassador to the UK, Elin Suleymanov, rejected claims his country would “ethnically cleanse” the region.

He told Sky News: “That is completely untrue. First, you don’t offer food and aid to people you are planning to ethnically cleanse.

“Second, it was Armenia that committed ethnic cleansing in the 1990s. The reason there are only Armenians living in the region today is because the Armenians ethnically cleansed everyone else. It was a diverse region before the 1990s.

“We don’t want to do what they did to us, we want to integrate that community into the diverse fabric of Azerbaijani society.”

Asked if there could be peace, he said: “Of course there can be peace, there was peace in Europe after the Second World War, people nuked each other and now they are still friends.”

The military offensive exacerbated problems for the population there, with many said to be sleeping outdoors and unable to get in touch with family and friends in rural areas.

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/120000-karabakh-armenians-to-leave-region-after-azerbaijan-regains-control-12968794

Ukrainians aghast as Poland stops sending weapons to fight Russia

Warsaw, one of Kyiv’s top allies since the Russian invasion began, took the surprise decision amid a row over Ukrainian grain.

People attend an event for the anniversary of Ukraine’s Independence Day in Warsaw, Poland, August 24, 2023 [Kacper Pempel/Reuters]
“I can’t believe the friendship is over.”

That is what Maryna Vasilevskaya, a Ukrainian woman of Polish origin, told Al Jazeera with a heavy sigh on Thursday after learning that Warsaw halted arms supply to Kyiv – and may cut aid to a million Ukrainian refugees it hosts.

Poland has supplied hundreds of Soviet-era tanks and 14 Mig-29 fighter jets to Ukraine in its time of need amid Russia’s invasion, served as a major transit hub for weapons from other Western nations, and provided its military bases for training Ukrainian servicemen.

It has also spent billions of euros on other forms of aid from the construction of temporary houses for refugees to donating medical supplies and power generators.

Vasilevskaya and her children were among the most vulnerable and desperate recipients of Poland’s aid – as well as its overwhelming, heart-melting moral support.

Her paternal grandparents were ethnic Poles, and she spent four months in the eastern Polish city of Krakow with her daughters aged five and eight last year after fleeing the Russian onslaught.

She returned to Kyiv in August because her husband Vladislav had a medical emergency and her eldest daughter Darya missed her schoolmates.

But despite the latest tensions, Vasilevskaya says she remains “eternally grateful” to Polish authorities and public.

She arrived in Krakow in mid-March 2022 on a slow overnight train jam-packed with crying children and frightened, disoriented grownups, but Poles welcomed them all like “dearest friends”.

“They helped us any way they could with everything, absolutely everything, from food and clothes to lodging and healthcare,” the 34-year-old, who works in marketing, recalled with tears in her eyes.

“I thought, ‘Oh my God,’ our dislike to each other is finally over.’”

Poland once conquered huge swaths of Kyivan Rus, a medieval Eastern European confederation of principalities that spawned what is Ukraine, Belarus and Russia.

It also was a conduit of Western influences from philosophy to visual arts, but its efforts to convert its Orthodox Christian subjects in what is now Ukraine to Roman Catholicism met resistance that partly paved the way to Moscow’s takeover.

Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/9/21/ukrainians-aghast-as-poland-stops-sending-weapons-to-fight-russia

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