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Should 100,000 Armenians have stayed in Artsakh?

October 13,2023 10:30

“The so-called regime caused panic among the population of Karabakh and forced them to move to Armenia,” Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said recently. “It is necessary to find out who needed to spread panic so that the 100,000 citizens of Artsakh emigrated quickly,” – Gurgen Arsenyan, deputy of the Civil Contract, seconded Aliyev.

It turns out that even after the attack of Azerbaijan on September 19, with many victims and destruction, the people of Artsakh had the opportunity to live a “safe, dignified and prosperous life” in their land under the rule of Azerbaijan. However, some “dark forces” (presumably the “formers,” the ARF, the Artsakh authorities, or Pashinyan’s opponents) deceived the people of Artsakh, convinced them that they were in danger, as a result of which 100 thousand people ended up in Armenia instead of being “integrated” into Azerbaijan.

I wonder which Azerbaijan we are talking about. That Azerbaijan, which kept those people under siege for nine months, depriving them of electricity and gas? That Azerbaijan, where hatred towards Armenians is instilled from kindergarten and where Ramil Safarov, who axed a sleeping Armenian, is de facto presented as a national hero? Is it about the country whose army displayed Kyaram Sloyan’s severed head in Azerbaijani villages during the April 2016 war? The country holding dozens of Armenians captive, making absurd accusations against them?

It turns out that the Artsakh Armenians should have been “integrated” into that country if those mentioned above “dark forces” had not misled them and planted doubts in Aliyev’s “high humanism.” By the way, in Bishkek, Putin and Aliyev discussed the “integration of Armenians” issue. Naturally, the two architects of the depopulation of Artsakh are doing this now, when there are at most a few dozen Armenians left in Artsakh. They could also make Pashinyan a participant in the discussion, as a third, so to speak, supporting architect.

…100 thousand of our compatriots are officially called “forcibly displaced.” But if we listen to some of the Civil Contract members, they were not forcibly displaced; they could live peacefully and safely in Artsakh.

Orientate yourself to a conclusion.

ARAM ABRAHAMYAN

 

In the photo of Artsakh journalist Marut Vanyan, parents and relatives tore the pictures of their children and husbands from the stand of the heroes of the Artsakh wars in the Freedom Fighters Park of Stepanakert so as not to defile them.

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