ROME, Nov 04 (IPS) – On December 12, 2022, a bunch of Azerbaijani environmentalists blocked the one street connecting Armenia with the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. The information went largely unnoticed by mainstream media, maybe as a result of it was obscure.
How may a bunch of so-called environmental activists block the free motion of individuals and fundamental provides? And the place, precisely, is Nagorno-Karabakh? Ten months later, the whole inhabitants of the enclave was fleeing to Armenia in what many described as a televised act of ethnic cleaning.
By the point the world started to search for this Armenian enclave on a map of the Caucasus, it was already too late. “Virtually nobody noticed it coming,” wrote The New York Instances in regards to the occasions that erased Nagorno-Karabakh from the map—and from historical past. And it’s a painful historical past.
Throughout the Soviet collapse in 1991, the battle between Armenians and Azerbaijanis triggered a wave of pressured expulsions. Within the disputed enclave, the primary Karabakh warfare (1988-1994) ended with an Armenian victory which led to the exodus of tons of of hundreds of Azerbaijanis to Azerbaijan.
For 25 years, the Armenians within the enclave loved a republic of their very own which nobody acknowledged. They renamed it with its historical title: Artsakh. In the meantime, Azerbaijan used this time to speculate oil and gasoline earnings into high-tech navy capabilities.
They had been used within the second Nagorno-Karabakh warfare: The Azerbaijani victory was declared within the fall of 2020 after 44 days of horror. For Baku, nonetheless, it was an “incomplete” victory: the Armenians had misplaced two-thirds of the territory underneath their management, however nonetheless remained within the capital and surrounding districts.
By autumn 2021, Azerbaijan was tightening its grip, choking off villages alongside its southern border with Armenia and successfully annexing swaths of land. In 2022, it launched an enormous artillery offensive alongside a lot of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.
However 2023 was a lot worse. The start of the tip got here with these younger members of pro-government teams who posed as “eco-activists.” With the backing of the Azerbaijani military, the blockade lasted 9 months, till Armenians fleden masse in late September following Baku’s remaining, decisive assault on the enclave.
Former Worldwide Prison Court docket prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo labelled the Azerbaijani aggression as “genocide.”
Since then, the displaced neighborhood has watched helplessly as movies posted by Azerbaijani troopers depict the looting of deserted properties, the desecration of cemeteries, and the destruction of archaeological heritage, together with thousand-year-old church buildings.
There are additionally considerations in regards to the situation of the Armenian prisoners of warfare. Baku acknowledges holding 23, although human rights organizations estimate the quantity to exceed 100. Info on their standing and judicial proceedings stays unknown.
Gold
On June 20, 2023, large protests erupted within the Azerbaijani city of Söyüdlü—200 kilometers west of Baku—after the announcement of a second synthetic lake supposed to retailer poisonous waste from an area gold mine.
Residents had already reported extreme well being points, together with excessive most cancers charges, as a consequence of water and soil contamination from the same lake inbuilt 2012. Crops and livestock had been additionally affected.
In contrast to six months earlier, the protest was violently suppressed by police. Press entry was restricted, and several other people had been arrested on bogus fees that included “drug trafficking.”
As soon as once more, the information barely reached past shops centered on the Caucasus. Furthermore, it might need been onerous to clarify to the remainder of the world that the nation internet hosting the United Nations Local weather Change Convention (COP29) this November (from the eleventh to the twenty second) was utilizing extreme pressure to suppress an environmental protest.
How may this even be defined—a convention hosted by a rustic whose financial system depends upon Caspian oil and gasoline extraction? Why does the United Nations belief a nation that routinely assaults its Armenian neighbors and imprisons or exiles political opponents, human rights activists, and journalists?
On September 24, Human Rights Watch famous that that is the third consecutive 12 months the COP is held in a “repressive state that severely limits freedom of expression and peaceable meeting” (the earlier ones being Dubai and Egypt).
Azerbaijan has been dominated by a single household and its shut circle since 1993. Ilham Aliyev, the present president of Azerbaijan, took workplace in 2003 following his father’s dying.
On September 1, the nation held parliamentary elections in a “restrictive political and authorized surroundings” that was “devoid of political pluralism,” in accordance with observers from the Group for Safety and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
Caviar and gasoline
Investigations by teams just like the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Venture (OCCRP) reveal that the huge fortune of the Aliyev clan is unfold throughout dozens of offshore firms. Azerbaijan ranks 154 out of 180 international locations on Transparency Worldwide’s 2023 Corruption Notion Index.
It is usually “one of many least free locations on the earth,” in accordance with Freedom Home, a Washington-based NGO. Presently, 23 Azerbaijani journalists are imprisoned in a rustic ranked 164 out of 180 on Reporters With out Borders’ Press Freedom Index.
But none of this appears to matter to the surface world.
For years, gaining affect by bribing European politicians with luxurious presents has been a central axis of Azerbaijan’s worldwide coverage. Western journalists, researchers, teachers, and parliamentarians have additionally been persistently courted by Baku in a apply generally known as “caviar diplomacy.”
This technique has performed a key position in shielding Azerbaijan from sanctions geared toward countering the Aliyev regime’s disregard for human rights.
The gasoline agreements between Brussels and Baku in 2022, supposed to cut back Europe’s dependency on Russian gasoline after the invasion of Ukraine, additional help this method. The truth that Azerbaijan itself imports gasoline from Russia does not appear to pose a problem for the EU.
Throughout the summit’s eleven days, hundreds of politicians and enterprise leaders will benefit from the hospitality of one of the crucial repressive and corrupt regimes on the planet.
The high-profile nature of the occasion will enable Azerbaijan to attain one in every of its main targets: to scrub up its picture within the eyes of the world and distract from its structural points concerning human rights and democracy.
The silver lining, although, is that this autumn has been the calmest in years for Armenians: everyone knew that Baku would keep away from launching assaults on the eve of the Local weather Summit that may tarnish its worldwide picture.
What the approaching winter could convey, nonetheless, stays unsure.
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