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Iraq Project

IPG Releases Statement on Azerbaijan's Violations of the Geneva Conventions


Image: The original document of the first Geneva Convention from 1864, on loan to the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum in Geneva, Switzerland. Image Credit: Kevin Quinn


The Iraq Project for Genocide Prevention has released a statement strongly condemning the government of Azerbaijan for not fulfilling its obligations under the 1949 Geneva Conventions regarding the treatment of Armenian prisoners-of-war.


Entitled "Statement on the Continued Inhumane and Illegal Detention of Armenian POWs," the statement outlines Azerbaijan's failure to return all Armenian POWs from the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh and notes the existence of evidence of humiliation, torture, inhumane treatment, and summary execution.


The IPG urges Azerbaijan to immediately release all remaining Armenian POWS still in custody. It also reminds the international community that silence in the face of Azerbaijan's flagrant abuses of international law only encourages greater abuse in the region and globally.


The full text of the statement can be read here:


The Iraq Project for Genocide Prevention strongly condemns Azerbaijan for not fulfilling its obligations under the 1949 Geneva Conventions regarding the treatment of Armenian prisoners-of-war. We urge its government to immediately release all remaining Armenian POWS still in custody. Based on international reporting and video footage shared on social media, the treatment to which many of these individuals were subjected amounts to the most serious crimes under international law.


Conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the territory of Artsakh/Nagorno-Karabakh stretches back many decades. The region has been majority Armenian throughout its history, though it was granted to the new state of Azerbaijan by Josef Stalin in 1923. After a referendum in 1991, when the territory declared independence from Azerbaijan, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a three-year war that resulted in Armenia’s victory in 1994 and occupation of Nagorno Karabakh. Apart from a brief armed engagement in 2016 and frequent Azerbaijani violations of the 1994 ceasefire, it was not until September 2020 that armed conflict was renewed between the two countries over the territory, resulting in Armenia’s loss of much of the territory. In a cease-fire agreement reached in November 2020, and brokered by Russia, both countries agreed to return any detainees they had in custody.


Armenia returned the Azerbaijani POWs in its custody by December 15, 2020. Azerbaijan has yet to return the majority of Armenian POWs.


Since the ceasefire agreement, there has been a total lack of transparency on the part of Azerbaijan, with the Azerbaijani government only partially following through on its obligations and insisting that any remaining detainees are terrorist suspects rather than POWs. Moreover, many POWs are being subjected to trials under the charges of terrorism, participation in a conflict as a mercenary, and illegally crossing of the state border of the Republic of Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani government seems to be using these trials, as well as the illegal detention of Armenian POWs, as a political negotiation tool. The world community has been largely silent.


In this context, it is impossible to know exactly how many POWs are missing, how many are still alive, and what conditions they are being subjected to. It has been reported that Armenian civilians are also being held captive, but as yet there is no confirmation of this. Such lack of information following a mutually agreed upon cease-fire is unacceptable and must be addressed immediately by Azerbaijan.


Those POWs who have been released relay experiences which included “electric shock devices, clubs, and batons” as well as Azerbaijani soldiers inserting their hands into one prisoner’s “wound in their stomach” and tying another to a radiator for an entire evening. According to reports, these same POWs fear that those left behind will be executed in custody if international actors do not step in. There is evidence that many POWs have already been executed after capture.


Azerbaijan is flagrantly violating international law, specifically the third Geneva Convention, which protects POWs “against acts of violence or intimidation,” and the November 2020 Tripartite Agreement signed by its own government. Thus, it must return the remaining POWs still under its custody to Armenian officials immediately. Any country which believes the law does not apply to them is a country which threatens the international community’s commitment to upholding peace, human rights and justice. Silence in the face of such illegality only encourages further lawlessness in the region and globally.


A PDF of the statement is available here:


 

(c) 2021 The Iraq Project

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