AGHJABADI (Azerbaijan): An Azerbaijani man dances and other people hold aloft national flags as they celebrate the transfer of Lachin region to Azerbaijan’s control on Tuesday as part of a peace deal that required Armenian forces to cede Azerbaijani territories they held outside Nagorno-Karabakh.—AP
AGHJABADI (Azerbaijan): An Azerbaijani man dances and other people hold aloft national flags as they celebrate the transfer of Lachin region to Azerbaijan’s control on Tuesday as part of a peace deal that required Armenian forces to cede Azerbaijani territories they held outside Nagorno-Karabakh.—AP

LACHIN: Azerbaijani soldiers on Tuesday hoisted their country’s flag in the final district given up by Armenia under a peace deal that ended weeks of fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

A column of Azerbaijani military trucks entered the Lachin district overnight, taking over the last of three regions around Karabakh handed over by Armenia under the Russian-brokered agreement.

AFP journalists saw soldiers raising the Azerbai­jani flag over an administrative building in the town of Lachin overnight and another alongside the road in the morning.

Armenia agreed to hand over the three districts — Aghdam, Lachin and Kalbajar — as part of the November deal that stopped an Azerbaijani offensive that had reclaimed swathes of territory lost to Armenian separatists in a 1990s war.

Under the agreement, some 2,000 Russian peacekeepers were deployed between the two sides and along the Lachin corridor, a 60-kilometre route through the district that connects Karabakh’s main city Stepanakert to Armenia.

Russian military vehicles accompanied Azerbaijani trucks driving along the corridor overnight and were deployed at the main crossroads in Lachin.

Most of the town’s residents fled in advance of the takeover, but 48-year-old Le­­­v­on Gevorgyan, the ow­­ner of a local grocery store, said he had decided to stay.

“I am afraid only of God. I have been here for 22 years, I started from nothing, I built everything,” he said. “I hope I will be able to continue, I still have a loan to pay. If I have to leave, I will burn everything.”

New reality

In a televised address on Tuesday, Azerbaijan’s Presi­dent Ilham Aliyev celebra­ted the dawn of “a new reality”.

“We’ve driven the enemy out of our lands. We’ve restored our territorial integrity. We’ve ended the occupation,” he said.

Nagorno-Karabakh broke from Azerbaijan’s control in a war after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union that left some 30,000 people dead.

The region declared independence but it was never recognised by any country, including Armenia, which strongly backs the separatists.

The peace accord signed on November 9 was rea­ched after six weeks of fi­­ghting that saw Azer­baijan’s army overwhelm separatist forces and threaten to advance on Stepanakert.

Under the agreement, Armenia is losing control of seven districts that it seized around Karabakh in the 1990s.

The separatists are retaining control over most of Karabakh’s Soviet-era territory but have lost the key town of Shusha.

Aliyev said that nearly 50,000 Azerbaijanis had lived in the Lachin district before the 1990s war and that they would be returning in “the nearest future”.

In Baku on Tuesday, crowds carrying Azerbai­jani flags celebrated the takeover of Lachin, an area glorified in a popular Azerbaijani folk song.

Olesya Vartanyan of the International Crisis Group said that while the handover of the last district signalled that the peace deal was “working”, the new status quo remains “unclear”.

Published in Dawn, December 2nd, 2020

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