Baku Pogrom
The Baku Pogrom (Armenian: Բաքվի ջարդեր,
Bakvi jarder) was a Pogrom directed against the ethnic Armenian inhabitants of
Baku, Azerbaijan SSR (USSR.) From January 12, 1990, a seven-day pogrom broke
out against the Armenians civilian population in Baku during which Armenians
were beaten, murdered, and expelled from the city. There were also many raids
on apartments, robberies and arsons. According to the Human Rights Watch
reporter Robert Kushen, "the action was not entirely (or perhaps not at
all) spontaneous, as the attackers had lists of Armenians and their
addresses". The pogrom of Armenians in Baku was one of the acts of ethnic
violence in the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, directed against the
demands of the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians to secede from Azerbaijan and unify
with Armenia.
History:
The Pogrom of Armenians in Baku
was not a spontaneous and one-time event but was one among series of ethnic
violence employed by the Azerbaijanis against the Armenian population during
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. In 1988 the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, an
ethnic Armenian enclave incorporated into the Soviet Azerbaijan, started
voicing their demands for the unification of the enclave with Armenia. On
February 20, 1988 the Soviet of People's Deputies in Karabakh voted to request
the transfer of the region to Armenia. This process took place in the light of
the new economic and political policies, Perestroika and Glasnost, introduced
by the new General Secretary of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev who had come
to power on March 10, 1985. This unprecedented action by a regional soviet
brought out tens of thousands of demonstrations both in Stepanakert and
Yerevan, but Moscow rejected the Armenians' demands labelling them as
“nationalists” and “extremists”.[9] On the following day demonstrations were
held by Azerbaijanis in Baku and other cities of Azerbaijan against the
unification of Karabakh with Armenia, during which strong anti-Armenian
sentiments were voiced: the common slogans were 'Death to Armenians',
'Armenians out of Azerbaijan'. On February 27, 1988 a massive Pogrom
was carried out in Sumgait during which the Armenian population of the city was
brutally slaughtered and expelled. The Sumgait pogrom was followed by another
pogrom against Armenians in 1988 in Kirovabad (today's Ganja) -the second
largest city of Azerbaijan from where all the Armenians were expelled. In spring and summer 1988 the ethnic tensions
were escalating between the Armenians and the Azerbaijanis. After the Sumgait
tragedy a massive migration of Armenians from Azerbaijan and Azerbaijanis from
Armenia began. By 1989 the Armenians
stayed only in those places where they had a well-established community,
including in Baku. By the beginning of 1990 there were only about 30–40
thousand Armenians left in Baku, mostly
women and pensioners. Similarly, by the end of 1988, dozens of villages in
Armenia had become deserted, as most of Armenia's more than 200,000
Azerbaijanis and Muslim Kurds left. In
December 1989 The Supreme Soviets of the Armenian SSR and Nagorno-Karabakh
passed a resolution on the formal unification of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia,
in accordance with the Soviet law on the people's right to self-determination. The
pogrom of Armenians in Baku took place shortly afterwards and according to a
number of sources it was a direct response to this resolution.
The Pogrom:
By January 1990, Azerbaijan was
in turmoil. Large rallies by the Azerbaijani Popular Front took place in Baku.
On January 12 a mass rally took place in the city's Lenin Square, during which
the radical nationalists of Azerbaijan's anti-communist Popular Front were
calling people for the defense of Azerbaijan's sovereignty from the demands of
the Armenians. At the same time groups of young Azerbaijanis were roaming the
streets, terrorizing the Armenians and warning them to leave the town. The
rhetoric of some Popular Front leaders, which included calls for the
deportation of Armenians from Azerbaijan, was at least harmful to the relations
with the Armenian population; that rhetoric was not significantly toned down
during the pogroms.
Thomas de Waal has called this Pogrom
the first part of "Black January" a tragedy with about 90 Armenian
victims. According to him, at first a large crowd gathered in the Lenin Square
of Baku, and at nightfall different groups separated from the Azerbaijani
Popular Front demonstrators, and started to attack Armenians. As in Sumgait,
their activities were distinguished by extreme cruelty: the area around the
Armenian quarter became an arena of mass killings. During the "pogroms in
Baku, Armenian homes were set on fire and looted while many Armenians were
killed or injured". Kirill Stolyarov in his book "Break-up"
describes beatings of the elderly, expelling them from their homes, burning
people alive and other cases of savagery. Soyuz weekly on May 19, 1990 reported
“… in the course of Armenian pogroms in Baku raging crowd literally tore a man
apart, and his remains were thrown into a garbage bin”. Aleksei Vasiliev, an
Azerbaijani soldier of the Soviet army testified seeing a naked woman being
thrown out of the window into the fire in which her furniture was burning.
The events in Baku were reflected
in a report by the Armenian state party in the UN Committee in elimination of
discrimination against women, July 27, 1997: For five days in January of 1990, the Armenian
community of Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, were killed, tortured, robbed and
humiliated. Pregnant women and babies were molested, little girls were raped in
front of their parents' eyes, Christian crosses were burned on their backs, and
they were abused for their Christian faith.
On January 15 Radio Liberty
reported: "Raging crowds killed at least 25 people at night of 14 in the
Armenian district of Baku – the capital of Soviet republic of Azerbaijan.
According to the preliminary information, the death toll reaches 25." According to the Izvestya
newspaper on January 15, 1990 : On January 13, 1990, after 5 p.m. a crowd of
some 50,000 people who were going out on a demonstration from the Lenin square,
splitting into groups, committed Pogroms, destructions, arsons, violence and
murders... a huge mob were yelling slogans glory to the heroes of Sumgait and
viva Baku without Armenians. In the article published on January 18, 1990
Izvestiya newspaper reported: On January 16, 64 cases of flat Pogroms were
identified, when Armenians became the victims… In the Lenin district of the
capital 4 burnt unidentified bodies were found. Over the past day З0 captive
Armenians were released. On January 19, 1990 Izvestiya newspaper reported: “On
January 17, 45 pogroms and arsons of residential houses in Baku were
committed”. Another article published in The
New York Times on January 19, 1990 said: Azerbaijan is no Lithuania... Nationalists in
Lithuania are struggling to wrest independence from Moscow by nonviolent,
political means. Nationalists in Azerbaijan also talk of independence, but
their protest includes bloody pogroms against their Armenian neighbors. One of the leaders of the
National Front of Azerbaijan Etibar Mammadov himself testified of the cruelties
and of no official intervention: «I
myself witnessed the murder of two Armenians near the railway station. A crowd
gathered, threw petrol on them and burned them, whereas the regional militia
division was only 200 meters away with some 400–500 soldiers of the internal
forces. The soldiers passed by the burning bodies at a distance of some 20
meters, and nobody attempted to circle the area and dissolve the crowd».
Thus the Pogrom in Baku resulted
in numerous human casualties; dozens of thousands of Armenians lost their
houses and were deported from the country – this was acknowledged by the
Chairman of the Soviet of the Union Yevgeny Primakov on the closed session of
the Supreme Council of USSR on March 5, 1990. The victims of the pogrom were
not only Armenians but also "the Jews, Ossetians, Georgians, and all
others who resembled Armenians to a greater or lesser extent. They were beating
in the face, not in the passport” The Pogrom lasted for about seven days during
which Central authorities did little to stop the violence – no state of
emergency was declared in Baku. The police was not responding to the calls of
the victims. Several eyewitnesses told Helsinki Watch/Memorial that they
"approached militiamen(police) on the street to report nearby attacks on
Armenians, but the militiamen did nothing". Many testimonies confirm that the police
deliberately did nothing to put an end to the pogrom and that everything was
organised in advance as the pogrom makers knew exactly where the Armenian
lived.
Eyewitness testimonies:
The World Chess Champion Garry
Kasparov, whose mother was Armenian, and his family was among the evacuees. As an eyewitness he later testified: No one would halt the Armenian pogroms in
Baku, although there were 11 thousand soldiers of internal troops in the city.
No one would intervene until the ethnic cleansing was carried out. The pogroms
were happening not in a random place but in the huge capital city with blocks
of flats. In such a megapolis as Baku the crowd simply cannot carry out
targeted operations like that. When the Pogrom-makers go purposefully from one
district to another, from one apartment to another this means that they had
been given the addresses and that they had a coordinator.
Baku massacre survivor Emma
Bagdasarova (currently US citizen) gave the following account: When the beatings began, my cousin was beaten
on a tram. They tied his both hands to the railings and began to beat. When he
called us, we came home, he was half dead... He was all bandaged. The police
did nothing, as I knew they were even helping with the beating... Soon we got a
call and were told that they would come to kill us at night.
In the words of another survivor
Roald Reshetnikov: The train was stopped
for a long time, and those from the National Front used to throw out things all
around... they seized the bags from the Armenians, opened suitcases, spread
things on the platform. Children were crying, some were with the blood on their
faces, things were all around the platform… And when I walked a little bit
further along the platform suddenly I heard a wild scream. Then I was told, as
I hadn't seen it myself, there was a woman literally ripped in half...
Aftermath:
On January 20, 1990, after the
Armenian population was already expelled from the city, the Soviet troops
intervened in Baku and a state of martial law was declared. This however did not accomplish its officially
stated goal of quelling the violence as most Armenians fled Baku. By the end of April 1993, it was estimated
that only 18–20,000 Armenians remained
in Baku, mostly in hiding. The authorities of Azerbaijan must have known what
result these organized demonstrations were going to have but they did not ask
for a curfew to be imposed in Baku. The
authorities thus not only failed to stem the anti-Armenian attacks, but also
raised serious doubts about whether the Soviets wished to stem the violence at
all or merely to hold the power in Baku. In this regard the article in Moscow
News, February 4, 1990 reported: Unlike
Sumgait, the Soviet army was late in Baku not for 3 hours, but for a whole
week. Moreover, to stop the pogroms it was enough to let in the forces of Baku
army garrison and the internal troops. The troops entered the town seized with
pogroms not to stop them, but to prevent the final seizure of power by the
People’s Front of Azerbaijan, which was planned for January 20. Leila Yunusova, a member of the
National Front of Azerbaijan, said that these acts were supported by the state
authorities "since they were in favour of the ideas of the right wing of
the National Front. The authorities of the Republic closed their eyes also on
the intentions of Azerbaijani right wing to escalate the confrontation with
Armenia... the arson of the Armenian church with no police intervention was one
of the examples of this policy. The pogrom in Baku was in many
ways compared to the pogrom in Sumgait in 1988. That the perpetrators of the
Sumgait pogrom did not receive due punishment and that the actual information
about the pogrom was censored and hidden from the public, largely contributed
to the repetition of analogous events in Baku in 1990. The ways and means
employed against the Armenians in Baku were also similar to those employed in
Sumgait. The newspaper Novaya Zhizn at the
time of the pogroms reported, "The number of Armenians killed in Baku has
already surpassed that of Sumgait; this new tragedy was the direct consequence
of the authorities trying to silence the first one."
In 1990, an "Open Letter on
Anti-Armenian Pogroms in the Soviet Union" was initiated by the Helsinki
Treaty Watchdog Committee of France and intellectuals from the College
International de Philosophie, Paris: As
recently as January 1990, the pogroms continued in Baku and other parts of
Azerbaijan. The mere fact that these pogroms were repeated and the fact that
they followed the same pattern lead us to think that these tragic events are
not accidents or spontaneous outbursts. The European Parliament (July
1988, par. 1, C) passed a resolution which “condemn[ed] the violence employed
against Armenian demonstrators in Azerbaijan” and announced: [T]he deteriorating political situation, which
has led to anti-Armenian pogroms in Sumgait and serious acts of violence in
Baku, is in itself a threat to the safety of the Armenians living in
Azerbaijan. Non-official sources estimate that the number Armenians living on
Azerbaijani territory outside Nagorno-Karabakh is around 2,000 to 3,000, and
almost exclusively comprises persons married to Azeris or of mixed
Armenian-Azeri descent. The number of
Armenians who are likely not married to Azeris and are not of mixed
Armenian-Azeri descent are estimated at 645 (36 men and 609 women) and more
than half (378 or 59 per cent of Armenians in Azerbaijan outside
Nagorno-Karabakh) live in Baku and the rest in rural areas. They are likely to
be the elderly and sick, and probably have no other family members.
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