‘How can we live with them?’: Terrified Armenians flee Karabakh
WIDESPREAD RUMOURS
They arrived after fleeing, often without even having taken the time to pack a suitcase.
“A woman from the village stayed behind and they slit her throat,” says Hayrepetian, recounting an anecdote from two separatist soldiers.
Steps away, Alina Alaverdyan, 69, grimaces as she mentions the rumour “of the rape of the daughter-in-law” of an acquaintance.
“The kind of things that get into your mind,” she says.
“They’re not human. They’re dogs.”
Every family in Nagorno-Karabakh has heard such rumours, impossible to confirm and almost always obtained second-hand.
There are numerous accounts of babies being decapitated or young women being raped.
Yet most of the refugees admit that they did not encounter any Azerbaijani soldiers before fleeing.
According to the testimonies gathered by AFP, Baku’s army generally did not enter towns and villages, confining itself to the strategic heights and roads.
An exodus followed, sometimes spontaneously and sometimes at the instigation of local authorities.
“We were told to leave and in 15 minutes it was done,” says Marine Poghosyan, 58, insisting they would not return to Karabakh under any circumstance.
“I’d rather live here in a tent than go back there.”
SERIAL BLOODSHED
A territory of less than 3,200 sq km – a little larger than Luxembourg – Karabakh has suffered four conflicts in recent history.
The first, between Armenia and Azerbaijan lasted from 1988 to 1994, and resulted in 30,000 deaths and the exodus of hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis and Armenians.
That was followed by numerous outbreaks of violence and wars in 2016, and then in 2020 when 6,500 died in six weeks and Armenia suffered a crushing defeat – and now the brief war in 2023.
Each refugee spoke of having lost at least one brother, son or husband in combat.
Images of alleged war crimes and atrocities, for which each side blamed the other, have begun to spread online.
“We talk about all this amongst ourselves. We’re going out of our minds,” said Alina Alaverdyan, a former military caterer who recalled that in Soviet times, “the Azerbaijanis were nice”.
“In this region, the Caucasus, there will never be peace,” said Hayrapetyan’s husband, who declined to give his name.
“There will always be wars, sometimes overt, sometimes covert.”
Source: CNA