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The Front Line

by Asbarez Staff
January 14, 2014
in Armenia, Columns, Featured Story, Latest, Living in Armenia, Top Stories
10
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Maria Titizian

BY MARIA TITIZIAN

“The Azerbaijanis are once again shooting at the village…for the past thirty minutes now…

God bless our people protecting the frontier…peace…”

This status was written on the Facebook page of the village of Nerkin Karmiraghbyur on January 10, 2014 at 9:00 PM. The mayor of the neighboring village of Aygepar informed certain media outlets that their village was also being targeted. Paravakar village also reported gunshots at about the same time.

All of these villages are located on the border with Azerbaijan in the northeast corner of Armenia in the marz of Tavush. According to the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, as of October 2013, sixteen villages in the region have been effectively cut off from the rest of the country because of the continual risk of gunfire from Azerbaijani forces. Most secondary roads are impassable, especially in the winter months.

During the Soviet era, a portion of the Ijevan-Noyemberyan-Tbilisi highway passed through Soviet Azerbaijani territory, through Azerbaijani villages. During the Karabakh war, that road was closed. After the 1994 ceasefire, civilian Armenians restarted using the road although it came with many risks and heavy losses, dozens were killed. They were fired upon but they didn’t have a choice. A close friend who is from Noyemberyan recalls that in 2001 he was driving on that stretch of the highway with his young family when his car broke down. It took him close to an hour to fix the problem and continue on with his journey. Almost 13 years later as he recalls the incident, you can see how it has shaken him, the fear of being fired on by enemy snipers while trying to protect your family isn’t a feeling you easily forget.

During Robert Kocharyan’s presidency, funds from the Lincy Foundation were used to build a new road that didn’t pass through Azerbaijani territory and was also out of range of Azerbaijani snipers except for a one kilometer section near the Voskebar-Baghanis stretch of the highway. Now even this portion of the highway is closed. An alternative road is now being utilized.

Thousands of Armenians living in their villages, working on their farms, trying under crushing circumstances to make ends meet are also living in perpetual fear because of continued Azerbaijani aggression. In the last week alone, the Azerbaijani military has violated the ceasefire agreement countless times not only on the Line of Contact between Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh but on state lines between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the marz of Tavush.

The press secretary of the Armenian Armed Forces said that during this last incident different calibre weapons, including large calibre machine guns were used by the Azerbaijanis. Blessfully no one in the villages targeted were killed or injured in the attack. This time.

Toward the end of last year however, an Armenian soldier was killed and three others were injured when the vehicle they were traveling on a highway in Tavush came under attack. Another Armenian soldier was killed on December 15 by Azerbaijani sniper fire near the village of Movses. In September, Azerbaijani troops opened fire again on Movses and Aygepar. In the same month, a young resident of Aygedzor was wounded after stepping on a mine near the Azeri border. He bled to death because Azeri forces kept shooting, preventing his fellow villagers from getting medical assistance to him. In February of 2013, a resident of Movses and father of three children, Mher Yeghshatyan was killed by an Azeri sniper. Two years earlier the same village, which lies some 300 meters from Azerbaijani territory had come under heavy attack.

In fact, 2012 saw a serious escalation in border clashes in Tavush; some of the worst violence in years was unfolding just as then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was in the region. In May of that year several Armenian villages in the marz came under fire until the early morning hours.

The worse was to come. In June 2012, the villages of Chinar and Berdavan came under heavy Azerbaijani attack. Three Armenian soldiers were killed and six wounded while fighting back a cross-border incursion by Azerbaijani forces. The following day, five Azerbaijani soldiers were killed. The Armenian Defense Ministry said they were part of an Azeri unit who had tried to infiltrate Armenian positions near the village of Voskepar in Tavush. On June 6, Azeri soldiers attempted to infiltrate Nagorno Karabakh this time near Horadiz. During that attack one Armenian soldier was killed and two others wounded.

In August 2012 Azerbaijan fired on Nerkin Karmiraghbyur…

The list goes on. The list is endless. These are stories we keep hearing over and over again. And along with the villagers, our young men are on the frontiers of our two republics, defending our borders.

Today, the Noyemberyan –Baghanis- Voskebar and Berd-Vazashen-Paravakar sections of Tavush are probably the most vulnerable areas of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh combined. Azerbaijanis have advantageous military posts along the border with Tavush with many villages in plain view of their snipers.

The soldiers along the Line of Contact, along the state border with Azerbaijan in Tavush marz continue serving under dangerous conditions. They serve for two years as part of their mandatory military service and then most go on with their lives. The villagers living along the border however serve their whole lives. From the moment they’re born to the minute they leave this earth, they are by virtue of their existence, on the front lines.

Asbarez Staff

Asbarez Staff

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Comments 10

  1. Vahe says:
    9 years ago

    Armenia and Russia have a mutual defense treaty that requires Russia to act if Armenia is attacked.

    Obviously, this treaty is null and void since Azerbaijan is attacking Armenia itself, but Russia is doing nothing.

    Prove me wrong.

    Reply
    • Harutik says:
      9 years ago

      Vahe,

      You are either being silly or you are seriously misinformed about international relations and treaties. Russia is obligated to help Armenia ‘if’ Armenia is under danger and official Yerevan asks for military aid. Ensuring that Armenia is not put in any danger by any of her neighbors is the reason why Russia has been stationing large numbers of military weaponry inside Armenia in recent years. If Armenia was seriously threatened by any of her neighbors it would mean world war three. Russian officials have even hinted that they would resort to nuclear weapons to protect Armenia. Anyway, Russia’s 58th army stationed in the north Caucasus (the unit that reached the outskirts of Tbilisi in just two/three days in the summer of 2008) will NOT invade Azerbaijan every time Azeris fire a bullet towards Armenia. LOL Where do you people get your strange ideas about international relations and politics? Reading many of the comments being posted on these boards is like listening to outdoor kabob vendors discussing politics.

      Reply
    • Norin Radd says:
      9 years ago

      The treaty is very much in effect. Cross border skirmish and violations while extremely tragic, are not declarations of war. During the last war Turkish invasion was hampered by a Russian assurance of counter strike on Turkish soil. This protected our flank while we bulldozed our way through Artzakh.

      Again while tragic, the death if a villager due to cross border skirmishes is not going to trigger the enactment of a treaty of defense on behalf of one of most powerful nations on Earth.

      Reply
    • Gurgen says:
      9 years ago

      These small border altercations do not amount to an all out war. Don’t think for one second that if Russia didn’t have our back Azerbaijan and Turkey combined wouldn’t resort to a full scale war. Hasn’t history shown their intentions many times before? Compared to Russian power in the region those two impotent powers have resorted to the only weapon in their arsenal – blockade. Soon that too will be rendered useless.

      Reply
    • Gurgen says:
      9 years ago

      And know that if full scale war does break out it will be Russian weapons and strategic support which will provide us the opportunity for victory and survival.

      Reply
    • GeorgeMardig says:
      9 years ago

      Have NO doubt, when things get serious Russia will act and strongly, remember South Ossetia. Once Armenia gets the OK from Russia, trust me most Oil rigs of Azerbaijan will be invaded or destroyed.

      Reply
  2. GeorgeMardig says:
    9 years ago

    Definitly sooner or later the turn of Azerbaijan will come, the world powers are busy with other issues

    Reply
  3. arziv says:
    9 years ago

    For Armenia survival and her continued existence as a nation the Army is all what matters. Without our army and its readiness to guarantee, defend, and expand our borders we can not exist. The moment has come when from a purely defensive position our armed forces should begin to think and conceptualize offensive projections. Geography is destiny. The army is our destiny, whether we like it or not. It is not a choice.

    Reply
  4. karakeuz says:
    9 years ago

    Azerbaijan violation of ceasefire does not invoke the military treaty with Russia. Russian assistance can only come about if Armenian territory is invaded ( and by extension Russia’s presence in the Caucasus and Armenia is threatened in geopolitical terms) by an external power. If Azerbaijan were to launch an invasion , Russian reaction in the military sense would be invoked.

    Reply
  5. GB says:
    9 years ago

    What ever, those Axeri cowards harassing our border village habitants, and needs prompt and right retaliation by ADF to neutralize and destroy enemy hideouts.

    Reply

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