International
Christian Concern (ICC) has learned that November 8, 2021, Azerbaijani
troops opened gunfire on a group of Armenian utility workers repairing
water pipes near the city of Shushi, which was captured during the
Turkish-Azeri war last year against Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenian:
Artsakh). The incident occurred on the same day that Azeri President
Ilham Aliyev was in Shushi alongside Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi
Akar to mark the one-year anniversary of the invasion’s ceasefire.
It
occurred near the Lachin-Stepanakert Road, the only transit option
connecting Karabakh’s Armenian Christian community with the outside
world. The road was temporarily closed following the incident. Most of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s land was lost during the war, and now residents are
surrounded by Turkish-Azeri forces. This is the second citizen killed
since last year’s ceasefire, with the first being murdered in front of Russian peacekeepers this past October.
“The
recorded incident is another proof of the anti-Armenian, genocidal and
fascist behavior of the Azerbaijani side towards the Armenian people,
about which we have stated many times since the signing of the
trilateral statement,” said Gegham Stepanyan, Artsakh’s Human Rights Ombudsman.
“Today,
at around 3:00 p.m., near the city of Shushi, the Azerbaijani side
fired at Armenian civilians working on water pipes in the area. One
civilian killed, three wounded,” said local journalist Anush Ghavalyan. “This
is how Azerbaijan’s President Aliyev brings peace to the region—by
killing civilians of Nagorno-Karabakh. No people, no conflict.”
Speaking
about the recent escalation of Turkish-Azeri aggression towards
Artsakh’s Armenian Christian residents, a Stepanakert local shared
simply, “This is hell… we don’t know what will happen.”
The deceased is 22-years old. The wounded civilians are 43, 41, and 31 years old.
The
incident comes just days after the United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom released a factsheet reiterating its
recommendations for State Department CPC and SWL designations. Both
Turkey and Azerbaijan were named on the factsheet as recommendations for the Special Watch List (SWL).
Claire Evans, ICC’s Regional Manager for the Middle East, said, “The
escalation of violence toward Armenian civilians living in
Nagorno-Karabakh is very alarming. These incidents give further evidence
of how Azerbaijan has embraced Turkey in such a way that both countries
are emboldened and empowered to commit genocidal atrocities towards
Armenian Christians. They intend to intimidate those who remain living
in Karabakh, suffocating them with forced isolation from the outside
world. Turkey and Azerbaijan have made it clear in their rhetoric that
their actions are viewed as a continuation of the 1915 genocide against
Christians. The ceasefire may have been established a year ago, but the
cleansing activities of the invasion continue to this very day.”
Tuesday, November 9, 2021
Azerbaijan looks to recreate 1915 genocide
For interviews, please contact: press@persecution.org.
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