home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT0766>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Carnage in Karabakh
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- FORMER SOVIET UNION
- Carnage in Karabakh
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With the Russians gone, Azeris and Armenians carry on their
- ancient blood feud
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES CARNEY/STEPANAKERT
- </p>
- <p> Rosa Babayan was in her kitchen fixing tea and slicing
- bread for breakfast when the first artillery shell of the
- morning slammed into her concrete apartment building. As she
- rushed down to the cellar with her family, another shell burst
- nearby, smashing the windows in the stairwell and sending a
- shard of glass into her forehead. Ten minutes later, she emerged
- to survey the damage, daubing the blood from just above her
- hairline. The corner bedroom of her fourth-floor apartment and
- all the rooms below it were a heap of rubble and twisted steel.
- </p>
- <p> Since that February morning when a Soviet-made GRAD
- missile destroyed part of her home, Babayan, 53, and her family
- have lived in the cellar, sleeping on a row of cots alongside
- neighbors. They are hardly alone. Babayan lives in Stepanakert,
- the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous enclave fully
- within the borders of the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan.
- Populated almost entirely by Armenians, Karabakh has seen more
- than 1,500 people die since 1988, when Armenians and Azeris,
- each side claiming the enclave as its own, began their
- skirmishing with hunting rifles. They have now graduated to
- modern weapons, including tanks, missiles and heavy artillery,
- turning their ethnic conflict into the bloodiest and most
- intractable of the many such conflicts bequeathed by the Soviet
- Union to the new Commonwealth of Independent States.
- </p>
- <p> Scarcely a single building has escaped damage in
- Stepanakert, the target of almost daily shelling all winter from
- a mountaintop stronghold held by the Azeris at Shusha, just four
- miles away. The city has been without running water, electricity
- or telephones for three months; other regions of Karabakh have
- been without these basic services for much longer. A near total
- absence of fuel -- a product of Azerbaijan's economic blockade
- of the enclave -- has left Karabakh's factories silent, its
- workers unemployed and without pay. Schools that have not been
- leveled are closed. The basement of the partially destroyed
- parliament building serves as the city's maternity ward, where
- nurses tend newborn babies by candlelight. A member of the
- International Committee of the Red Cross, which opened a station
- in Stepanakert three weeks ago, said he fears the city could
- soon be struck by hunger, and, as the weather warms, by
- epidemics.
- </p>
- <p> Once home to 70,000 of Karabakh's 200,000 residents,
- Stepanakert's population has been shrinking as some families
- send their children to outlying villages. Most of the 50,000 who
- remain live underground in crowded, dark basements. They emerge,
- as Babayan did recently, only when there is a lull in the
- shelling. Adapting to life in wartime, they walk the streets
- carefully, always trying to place the wall of a building between
- themselves and the likely trajectory of incoming artillery. "We
- will live on," said Babayan, whose sister had died the day
- before from shrapnel wounds. "We are simply not going to give
- up our land."
- </p>
- <p> The war over the unspoiled mountains and fertile valleys
- of Karabakh is a blood feud with roots that reach deep into the
- history of the region. In 1915, during the twilight of the
- Ottoman Empire, Armenians living in Turkish Armenia were
- deported into the deserts of what is now Syria. At least 1
- million people of Armenian descent were either killed or died
- of starvation, though modern Turkey disputes that figure as
- exaggerated. Azeris are ethnic cousins of the Turks, and in
- Karabakh today some Armenian soldiers claim they are continuing
- the historic battle. "For the Azeris, the only solution is to
- rid Karabakh of all Armenians, just like the Turks in 1915,"
- says Artur, one such freedom fighter in Stepanakert. "But we
- won't let that happen again."
- </p>
- <p> In 1923, after Soviet power had been established in both
- Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Bolsheviks granted the disputed
- region of Karabakh to the Azeris. Before Mikhail Gorbachev came
- to power, Armenian protests over Karabakh were sporadic and
- quickly suppressed. But in 1988 the Armenian movement to free
- Karabakh from Azeri rule went public, and the fighting began.
- </p>
- <p> Until the Soviet Union's collapse, the Kremlin tended to
- favor the Azeris in the conflict, largely because Azerbaijan was
- the last bastion of communist orthodoxy in the Caucasus. Soviet
- army and Interior Ministry troops alternately tried to keep the
- peace or assisted the Azeris in military operations. Though the
- Azeri government in Baku accuses Russia of helping Armenia, it
- is the Azeri fighters in the region who are far better equipped
- with Soviet military weaponry than their opponents.
- </p>
- <p> While Gorbachev was President, the international community
- treated the Karabakh conflict as an internal affair of the
- Soviet Union. But as the fighting increased this year and former
- Soviet troops pulled out of the enclave, the United Nations, the
- Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (C.S.C.E.), and
- Iran, which shares borders with both Armenia and Azerbaijan and
- is trying to expand its role in the region, all launched
- efforts to resolve the conflict. The first cease-fire brokered
- by Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati collapsed within
- a few hours. The second one lasted for several days, with both
- sides reporting relatively minor violations. That was long
- enough for U.N. special envoy Cyrus Vance to visit Stepanakert
- on a fact-finding mission late last month and to declare his
- hope that third-party mediation could help bring peace.
- </p>
- <p> But early last week artillery shells cascaded in violent
- waves upon Stepanakert. From mid-morning until after nightfall,
- the city rattled to the thunderous explosions of 157 GRAD
- missiles, highly destructive artillery-launched shells. Karabakh
- leaders said more than 500 Azeri troops had moved down the
- mountain from Shusha to attack Stepanakert's outskirts. At a
- makeshift hospital on the first floor of the city's former
- Communist Party headquarters, doctors operated throughout the
- shelling as jeeps and ambulances arrived carrying the wounded.
- In the building's foyer, an old woman stared in grief at the
- body of her dead son, her rhythmic cries punctuated by the deep
- roar of artillery. On the sidewalk outside, a man waiting for
- news of his own son's wounds turned to those near him and asked,
- "Do you see the life we live?"
- </p>
- <p> The Azeri government denied that an attack had taken place
- and accused the Armenians in Karabakh of breaking the
- cease-fire. Even in Stepanakert, it was impossible to tell for
- sure who had started the fighting that raged just a kilometer
- from city limits. But the GRAD bombardment on the city was no
- illusion. Nor was the stream of dead and wounded. By day's end
- nine Armenian soldiers had been killed in battle, three
- civilians in the shelling. More than 30 people had been wounded.
- After nightfall, the Karabakh Defense Minister, Serge Sarkisian,
- said the offensive had been turned back and that more than 100
- Azeri troops had died in the fighting. "Perhaps we Armenians are
- naive," said Karabakh Prime Minister Oleg Yesayan. "We expected
- them to violate the cease-fire, but not on such a large scale."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the renewed fighting, international mediation
- efforts continued. Last week, in negotiations organized by Iran
- and Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to stop their
- cross-border fighting. Karabakh was not discussed, but at a
- recent C.S.C.E. meeting in Helsinki, tentative plans were made
- for high-level talks on the future of the enclave. The two
- sides, however, remain far apart. Armenia insists it is a third
- party to a conflict between Karabakh and Azerbaijan and demands
- that the elected leaders of the enclave's self-declared
- government participate in all negotiations. Azerbaijan does not
- recognize Karabakh's leaders or its demands for independence.
- "Nagorno-Karabakh risks entering a new phase of all-out conflict
- that could possibly draw in other states," warned Armenian
- Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian, referring to the competition
- between Turkey and Iran for influence in the region. To avoid
- that, he said, "there must be a simultaneous dispatch not only
- of international observers but of peacekeeping troops."
- </p>
- <p> But not all hope for peace rests on outside mediation.
- Almost every day for the past three weeks, commanders from
- Askeran, an Armenian town on Karabakh's border with Azerbaijan,
- and Agdam, on the Azeri side, have met along a dirt road on the
- front to negotiate prisoner exchanges. Alakhverdi Bagirov, the
- commander of local Azeri Popular Front forces, and Vitaly
- Balasanian, his Armenian counterpart, have known each other
- since childhood, long before their two towns were divided by
- war. Balasanian, 33, who managed a restaurant in peacetime, runs
- the headquarters of his battalion from a stone fortress built
- in 1751 on a hill overlooking Askeran. At their daily
- negotiations, he and Bagirov sit on rocks beside a shelter dug
- out of the road and agree to keep their own separate peace, even
- as others continue to fight.
- </p>
- <p> Both men blame the Russians in general, and the Soviet
- army and Gorbachev in particular, for allowing and even
- encouraging the transformation of the Karabakh conflict into a
- violent war. "Here's perestroika for you," Bagirov scoffs, his
- hand swooping out to encompass the surrounding soldiers from
- both sides, every one of them armed with a Kalashnikov rifle.
- "The Russians gave us weapons, and they gave the Armenians
- weapons. And they are guilty."
- </p>
- <p> Now the Russians have left, and the Soviet Union has
- disappeared. But the fighting in Karabakh continues, and the
- death toll rises. The suffering is indiscriminate, with innocent
- civilians afflicted as often as warriors. Last week, as rockets
- could be heard falling once again on Stepanakert a few miles
- away, a small plane landed to evacuate wounded to Yerevan, the
- Armenian capital. A stretcher bearing a woman in her 50s, her
- face scarred and swollen, was lifted aboard. She had lost both
- her legs to a GRAD missile the night before. Her husband, pale
- and exhausted, said nothing as he bent down to dab her lips with
- a moist cloth. After takeoff, the plane rose level with the
- white tops of the mountains that define Karabakh. The sounds of
- a war in progress fell away, replaced by the soft moan of one
- more of its victims.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-