Syrian Armenians flee one war zone for another in Karabakh: EurasiaNet

Syrian Armenians flee one war zone for another in Karabakh: EurasiaNet

PanARMENIAN.Net - About 20,000 Syrian refugees have settled in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh since the Syrian civil war erupted in 2011. Most of them are Syrian Armenians, descendants of those who fled the Ottoman Empire a century ago amid the genocide against Armenians there.

About 30 families of Syrian refugees live in Karabakh. Some of them moved there with the help of charity groups like the Artsakh Fund, which aid settlers by offering homes and low-interest loans for leasing land and agricultural equipment Eurasianet.org says in an article.

Others were drawn to Karabakh for patriotic reasons. “This is our home, we are finally independent and we will keep this land whatever the price might be,” said Andranik Chaushyan, 36, a recent settler from Syria to the Karabakh village of Berdzor.

Resettling in a potential war zone may seem foolhardy, but Syrian Armenians say that Karabakh feels more like “their” war than the one they fled in Syria. Chaushyan fought in the Four-Day War in April 2016, the heaviest bout of fighting against Azerbaijani forces since the 1994 ceasefire agreement, and his second child was born while he was at the front line.

“I had a good life before coming to Armenia, but I wanted my children to grow up in their historical motherland, with fellow-Armenians,” he said.

Many of the settlers were farmers back in Syria and now live in houses newly built for them by the local government. Charity groups helped fund construction. Other newcomers have refurbished dwellings that were abandoned by their previous Azeri owners.

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan saw hundreds of thousands expelled on each side, and many Azeris who were forced to flee Karabakh still harbor hopes of returning to their former homes. The Armenian government has agreed in principle to the return of all displaced persons from the conflict – though there is still no clarity on how such a plan would be implemented. Amid that uncertainty, the settlement of Syrian Armenians in Karabakh is a sore point in Baku.

The settlers, however, are not concerned with that. Their main complaints about living in Karabakh are the isolation and poverty of the region, including high unemployment rates. But they say that is outweighed by the ability to be around fellow Armenians and their children being able to receive a quality education free of charge.

“I have always been a farmer so for me coming to Karabakh was only natural, as this is our historical land and there was a program providing housing for resettlers,” said Alishan Sarkis, 41. “We want to live up to the dreams and longings of the martyrs to see Karabakh independent, strong and prospering. I only wish everyone had a job, to be able to provide for his family.”

 Top stories
The EU does not intend to conduct military exercises with Armenia, Lead Spokesperson for EU Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Peter Stano says.
Hikmet Hajiyev has said that there is no place for USAID operation in Azerbaijan any longer.
A telephone conversation between Putin and Pashinyan before the CSTO summit is not planned, Peskov says.
London’s Armenian community has been left feeling “under attack” after the city’s Genocide monument was vandalised.
Partner news
---