Dire humanitarian consequences
- No one can travel to and from Armenia anymore, and about a thousand people (including several dozen children who were in Yerevan on 12 December to attend the final performance of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest), have been separated from their families.
- All planned surgical operations are suspended. After pressure from the ECHR, following the death of a seriously ill person in a Stepanakert hospital, and thanks to the mediation of the International Red Cross, some patients are being transferred by special convoys to medical centres in Armenia.
- Pharmacies are running out of stocks of all medicines.
- Fuel is running out, and very few vehicles are on the road.
- Food is running out and shops are empty; the government is drawing on rapidly dwindling emergency food supplies like pasta and canned goods.
- Ration cards have been distributed.
- Kindergartens are closed because it is not possible to provide food for children
- Since 10 January, the high-voltage electricity grid from Armenia has been interrupted due to a fault (or act of sabotage) in Azerbaijani-controlled territory, preventing the Armenian electricity company from repairing the fault. Artsakh provides for itself with a few small hydroelectric power plants by scheduling repeated daily blackouts to save energy.
- Since 12 January, the cable for the internet connection has been sabotaged at the Azerbaijani blockade along the Lachin corridor.
Thus, 120,000 people (including 30,000 children and 20,000 elderly) are in the midst of a humanitarian crisis.
At a press conference on 10 January, Azerbaijan's President, Ilham Aliyev, admitted that the blockade of the Lachin corridor had been put in place by the Azerbaijani state. He also stated that Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians, who did not want to live under the Azerbaijani government (which ranks 154th in the World Press Freedom Index), would be free to leave and that the corridor would be opened for them to pass.
Appeals
There have been numerous 'institutional' appeals for the restoration of the viability and free movement of people on the Lachin corridor.
Pope Francis expressed concern for the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and appealed to the parties to find “peaceful solutions for the good of the people” during the Angelus of 18 December 2022.
But the situation is getting worse every day. It is heading towards an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.
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