Blackouts to food shortage: How Azerbaijan's blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh triggered a humanitarian crisis

Blackouts to food shortage: How Azerbaijan's blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh triggered a humanitarian crisis

Jan 23, 2023 - 01:30
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Blackouts to food shortage: How Azerbaijan's blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh triggered a humanitarian crisis

In mid-December 2022, a group of Azerbaijani activists blocked the Lachin Corridor- the only link connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia.

More than a month on, the blockade continues. Apart from escalating tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan, it has sparked a humanitarian crisis in Karabakh.

The disputed enclave’s 120,000 people have been facing food and medicine shortages as the blockade threatens supplies from Armenia.

Former Soviet nations Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a bloody war over Nagorno-Karabakh. The conflict, which international observers say was triggered by Azerbaijan, saw Armenia cede most of the territories it held since the 1990s to Baku.

However, full-scale fighting between the South Caucasus neighbours stopped after a Moscow-brokered peace deal in September 2020. As part of the agreement, Russia deployed its peacekeepers in the region.

The peacekeepers are tasked with overseeing the Lachin corridor.

What’s happening in Karabakh

Azerbaijani “eco-activists” say that Armenians are carrying out illegal mining in the disputed enclave which is a violation of the 2020 peace deal.

Armenia has accused the Azerbaijani government of “orchestrating” the demonstrations while the latter has accused Yerevan of using the Lachin corridor to transport land mines into Nagorno-Karabakh.

Meanwhile, food reserves continue to run low in Karabak which is called Artsakh by Armenians.

The local government of the Armenian-populated Karabakh has rolled out food stamps that allow only limited purchases of rice, sugar and cooking oil.

The International Red Cross has been helping to carry critical patients to Armenia as hospitals run out of essential drugs.

Local Armenian authorities have called for an airlift for critical supplies but Azerbaijan hasn’t permitted the region’s airport to operate, AP reported.

Gas supply cut to the region by Azerbaijan has worsened the situation amid battling harsh winters. According to reports, the temperature in parts of the enclave has dipped to -5C. The gas supply cut has resulted in power outages across the enclave forcing the closure of schools and businesses.

Armenia says that Azerbaijan has been trying to make the daily lives of Armenians difficult in a bid to force them into fleeing Karabakh.

Azerbaijan denies the accusations.

Distracted by Ukraine, Russia losing its influence in Caucasus

The continued blockade is also a reflection of the weakening Russian influence in the region. Armenia has time and again signaled its growing frustration with Moscow over Nagorno-Karabakh.

During a bilateral meeting, Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan told Russian president Vladimir Putin that Russian peacekeepers are no longer in control of the Lachin corridor.

Distracted by the Ukraine war, Russia has been playing a limited role in Karabakh. It even shifted some of its peacekeepers from the enclave to Ukraine in September 2022. Notably, Azerbaijan launched fresh attacks on Armenia amid the Russian troop drawdown.

Also read: From Ukraine, Karabakh to Pakistan: 10 conflicts the world can’t ignore in 2023

Already caught in a long-drawn war, Moscow seems to be unwilling to trigger any armed confrontation with Baku.

It’s also averse to severing ties with Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey. Both have enjoyed more or less good relations with Russia and an increasingly isolated Moscow is inclined to avoid any run-ins with few of the nations with which it enjoys somewhat cordial relations.

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