![Posters conmemorating two Armenian prisoners on the streets of Yerevan. The total number of detainees remains unknown. Credit: Edgar Kamalyan](https://static.globalissues.org/ips/2024/01/armenianprisoners1-629x420.jpg)
YEREVAN, Armenia, Jan 25 (IPS) – On July 29, 2023, Vagif Khachatryan, a 68-year-old Armenian retiree, awoke early in Nagorno Karabakh —a self-proclaimed republic within the Caucasus area—to journey to Armenia. He wanted to endure delicate coronary heart surgical procedure.
Regardless of the urgent medical emergency, it was not a simple choice. The one highway that related Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the remainder of the world had been reduce off for seven months by the Azerbaijani military. Even when he was travelling in an Worldwide Committee of the Purple Cross automobile, Khachatryan knew he may face bother.
He was arrested that day by the Azerbaijani border guard service. 4 months later, a army court docket in Baku handed him a 15-year sentence for crimes allegedly dedicated throughout a battle fought greater than 30 years in the past.
Vagif Khachatryan is yet one more sufferer of a battle that has its roots within the Soviet Union. After the collapse of the USSR in 1991, Armenians remained the bulk in Nagorno-Karabakh, however the enclave was formally on the territory of the new child Republic of Azerbaijan.
A battle was already unravelling in Karabakh. The Armenian victory additionally led to the forcible displacement of a whole bunch of 1000’s of Azerbaijanis. In September 2020, the latter launched an offensive by means of which they took over two-thirds of the territory underneath Armenian management.
However there have been nonetheless greater than 100,000 Armenians left.
In December 2022, Baku blocked the one highway connecting Artsakh with Armenia and the remainder of the world, depriving its inhabitants of essentially the most primary provides together with meals and medicines. It was that lack of medical help that pushed Vagif Khachatryan to his destiny seven months later.
With Khachatryan already in jail, the blockade on Nagorno Karabakh was lifted in September 2023 within the wake of a brand new Azeri assault. The highway was opened in order that the Armenians remaining within the enclave fled en masse to Armenia.
Senior worldwide our bodies just like the European Union Parliament accused Azerbaijan of finishing up “ethnic cleaning” in opposition to the Armenian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh. Immediately, Karabakhis are restarting from scratch in Armenia, the Khachatryans amongst these.
“The truth that my father has a coronary heart illness provides me hope that he won’t be tortured in Azerbaijani custody,” Vera Khachatryan advised IPS by phone from Jermuk, 170 kilometres southeast of Yerevan.
Her father’s arrest, she mentioned, has additionally had an influence on her mom. “She suffers from new well being and psychological issues which solely add to these derived from compelled displacement,” defined the displaced girl.
On September 28, Karabaj authorities issued a decree dissolving the self-proclaimed Nagorno Karabakh Republic as of January 1, 2024.
![Political leaders of Nagorno Karabakh during one of the last masses celebrated in the enclave. Eight of them are today in Azerbaijani prisons. Credit: Edgar Kamalyan / IPS](https://static.globalissues.org/ips/2024/01/armenianprisoners2.jpg)
Secrecy
On December 13, 2023, a prisoner trade came about: Azerbaijan launched 32 Armenian troopers in trade for the final two Azerbaijani troopers underneath Armenian custody. Armenia’s help for Azerbaijan to host the United Nations Local weather Summit in Baku was additionally a part of the deal.
Either side described it as “an indication of goodwill.”
“Azerbaijan makes use of the prisoners´ difficulty as a political software to place stress on Armenia or to acquire one thing in return,” Siranush Sahakyan, consultant of the Armenian prisoners’ pursuits on the European Court docket of Human Rights advised IPS by cellphone.
“No repatriation performed by Baku aside from the prisoner swap was held underneath an amnesty or some other authorized process,” confused Sahakyan.
Armenia claims that greater than 100 prisoners of battle and civilians stay in Azerbaijan, together with three former presidents of Nagorno-Karabakh, the speaker of parliament and members of the cupboard. Baku says the full variety of Armenian prisoners in its custody is 23.
Apart from the contradicting figures, their state additionally poses a significant supply of concern. In a March 2021 report, Human Rights Watch denounced that the Armenian prisoners of battle suffered abuse in Azerbaijani custody and known as on Baku to launch “all remaining prisoners of battle and civilians.”
Confronted with Baku’s inaction, Yerevan appealed to the European Court docket of Human Rights (ECHR).
![Protest in Stepanakert (the capital of Nagorno Karabakh) after the closure of the road that connected the enclave with Armenia, in December 2022. After nine months of blockade and an Azerbaijani attack, all Karabakh residents fled to Armenia. Credit: Edgar Kamalyan / IPS](https://static.globalissues.org/ips/2024/01/armenianprisoners3.jpg)
“Azerbaijan is obliged to submit a report on arbitrarily detained senior officers to the ECHR earlier than the top of January 2024,” Hasmik Samvelyan, spokesperson for the Armenian Illustration for Worldwide Authorized Affairs, reminded IPS in a phone dialog.
In the intervening time, the Worldwide Committee of the Purple Cross is the one unbiased physique that has entry to Armenian prisoners.
“Our representatives have visited all of the captives detained in Baku and checked the circumstances wherein they’re held,” Zara Amatuni, ICRC communications officer in Armenia, advised IPS by phone.
A number of of the prisoners’ family members confirmed to IPS that they’d the chance to talk with them. The ICRC mediates to facilitate communication by phone each 30 to 40 days. The organisation averted giving extra particulars after interesting to the significance of confidentiality.
“We current our observations solely to the competent authorities,” the ICRC press officer confused to IPS.
Repatriated prisoners have additionally constantly refused to speak to journalists in regards to the circumstances of their imprisonment, and that´s additionally the Armenian state´s coverage. Many see it as a approach to keep away from triggering a response from Azerbaijan that might worsen the imprisonment circumstances.
![Families fleeing Nagorno Karabakh after the Azerbaijani attack in September 2023. Several political organisations and human rights defenders accused Azerbaijan of launching "a campaign of ethnic cleansing" against the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh. Credit: Siranush Sargsyan / IPS](https://static.globalissues.org/ips/2024/01/armenianprisoners4.jpg)
Ready for justice
Throughout a global discussion board on the way forward for Nagorno Karabakh held on December 6 in Baku, Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev declared that the Armenian prisoners “are ready for Azerbaijani justice to rule.”
The latest wave of repression in opposition to the media and any voice vital of the Authorities doesn’t invite hope. Final December, Amnesty Worldwidedenounced the arrests of not less than six unbiased Azerbaijani journalists in only one month on “fabricated” fees.
In its newest world freedom report, the Freedom Home claimed Azerbaijan is likely one of the 57 international locations categorised as “not free” out of the 159 studied. The Washington-based NGO denounced “quite a few arbitrary arrests and detentions”. It additionally described Azerbaijan’s judiciary as “corrupt and subordinate to the manager.”
One other of these ready for Azerbaijani justice to rule is Vicken Euljeckjian. This Lebanese who additionally has Armenian nationality was captured together with Maral Najarian —one other Lebanese Armenian— by Azerbaijani troopers whereas driving from Yerevan to Nagorno-Karabakh on November 10, 2020, a day after the Russian-brokered ceasefire was introduced.
4 months after their arrest, Beirut secured Najarian´s launch, however not Euljeckjian´s. The latter was sentenced to twenty years in jail in June 2021. His title, nonetheless, appeared on the record of prisoners to be swapped on December 13, 2023, however a last-minute shock prevented it.
“After three years of separation, ache and despair, we had been very excited to listen to that he would lastly be launched. Out of the blue, his title was changed with that of one other prisoner three hours earlier than the trade,” Vicken´s spouse Linda Euljeckjian recalled to IPS by cellphone from Beirut.
Hoping to ease the method, Linda and her daughter travelled to Yerevan to fulfill with Armenian officers. However the latter may do little, so the household additionally approached senior Lebanese officers.
“After stress from the native media, the Lebanese authorities seems to be fascinated about discussing the difficulty of my husband’s repatriation with Azerbaijani officers,” mentioned Linda.
Whereas she waits for the discharge of her husband, the difficulty of Armenian prisoners of battle and civilians in Azerbaijan stays amongst these to be settled in a battle inherited from the twentieth century.
© Inter Press Service (2024) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service