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    NewsWhat is Nagorno Karabakh, the disputed separatist enclave in the Caucasus between...

    What is Nagorno Karabakh, the disputed separatist enclave in the Caucasus between Armenia and Azerbaijan

    Nagorno Karabakh It is at the center of a long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which have fought two wars over this enclave of the Caucasus with an Armenian majority, but recognized as part of Azerbaijan.

    Considered a central region of its history by Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh – which means mountainous Karabakh or upper Karabakh in Russian – It has changed hands many times over the centuries.

    Integrated into the Armenian kingdom in ancient times, this region came under Arab influence in the Middle East before a revolt returned it to Armenian rule.

    After a period of Persian influence, the Khanat of Karabakh, then a Turkish state, It was incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1813.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan then fought over the territory in a civil war after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.

    This terrestrial enclave remains essentially populated by Armenians of Christian confession, according to official data, and has about 120,000 inhabitants spread across a mountainous territory. A third of the population lives in Stepanakert, the cital.

    The war of the 1990s led to significant population displacements, with 700,000 Azerbaijanis fleeing Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh and 230,000 Armenians fleeing Azerbaijan.

    With the departure of the Soviet army from the region, an escalation of violence led to open war. Some 30,000 people died until the ceasefire negotiated by Russia on May 17, 1994.

    Although it has its own institutions and government, Nagorno Karabakh It is supported politically, economically and militarily by Armenia.

    A new conflict broke out in the fall of 2020, causing 6,500 deaths in six weeks before a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement.

    The war ended with a crushing defeat for Armeniaforced to cede important territories around the enclave and a part of the region to Azerbaijan, especially the city of Chucha.

    Tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia restarted in late 2022, when Azerbaijan installed checkpoints before blocking traffic in the Lachin corridorthe only road leading from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, causing serious shortages of food and medicine in the enclave.

    In July, Armenian diplomacy called for redoubling “international efforts” to end the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh and reopen the corridor, and expressed fears that “ethnic cleansing” would occur in the region.

    Despite separate mediations by the European Union, the United States and Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan they could not understand each other for a peace agreement.

    This Tuesday, Azerbaijan launched “anti-terrorist operations” in Nagorno Karabakh, after the death of four police officers and two Azerbaijani civilians due to mine explosions and accused Armenian separatists of an act of “terrorism.”

    Source: Clarin

    Awutar
    Awutar
    This post is posted by Awutar staff members. Awutar is a global multimedia website. Our Email: [email protected]

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