Karabakh capital mobilises discreetly to support soldiers
At first sight, the city appears to be almost
deserted.
But underground, in cellars, garages and depots
hidden from sight, Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh is fully
mobilised to support troops fighting Azerbaijani forces at the front.
As air raid sirens sound for several minutes,
warning of the next salvo of rockets or a the imminent arrival of drones, a
textiles factory tucked into the side of mountains that dominate the city is
quietly at work.
A few cars are parked nearby, indicating some
activity. Men in civilian clothes -- sometimes with a parka or camouflage
trousers -- and others in full uniform are coming and going as discreetly as
possible.
To a casual observer, the building might seem to be
lying idle. But while the upper floors are empty, people are working hard in
the vast basement.
First-aid workers and nurses are busy cleaning khaki
stretchers, presumably to evacuate wounded fighters. The litters are stowed
away in four old Soviet-era UAZ vans from the local emergency services, ready
to leave for the front.
In a storeroom, dozens of boxes are piled up:
coffee, bars of chocolate, cigarettes and other supplies collected in the
Armenian capital Yerevan and other cities, destined for front-line soldiers.
Lying on the ground are dozens of pickaxe handles,
brand-new shovels still in their wrapping, vital tools for positions where
sandbags must be filled for protection.
Further inside, in a large neon-lit hangar, about 10
people are busy behind two rows of sewing machines.
They used to work on the upper floors, says Sanasar
Tevonyan, using a ruler and pencil to trace a pattern on green camouflage
fabric.
"We came down to the basement a week ago to
take shelter from the bombs that were starting to rain down."
Sanasar, 62, said he had come from Russia to fight,
but was considered too old. "Here, I can make myself useful."
Before the conflict started, the factory produced
yarn for carpets or jackets that were exported to Italy.
It has been converted to producing uniforms,
sleeping bags and ammunition belts, helped by volunteers devoted to the cause
of "Artsakh" the Armenia term for Nagorno-Karabakh and the official
term for the self-proclaimed breakaway republic, which is recognised by no
country, not even Armenia.
After years of conflict, many people in this
ethnic-Armenian region of Azerbaijan have joined the cause, each one helping
the fighters who battle Azerbaijan as best they can.
Some factory staff preferred to evacuate with
families over the border to Yerevan. Bella Hayeapetyan chose to stay.
Wrapped in a wool cardigan, spectacles perched on
the end of her nose, she has no regrets, saying that she remained "for our
sons, our brothers, our husbands fighting on the front."
A few younger volunteers do their best at the sewing
machines.
"Some of them didn't know anything," she
says. "I taught them to sew."
One is Maria Miqayelyan, 36, who with her colourful
leggings looks like she would be more at home at a zumba class. Today however,
she is busy embroidering the pockets of an ammo jacket.
"This is a small country," she says.
"Every family has someone at the front. Everything we are doing, we are
doing for our people and our country."
"There isn't a family that doesn't do
something, one way or another, for the war," effort she adds. And
frontline fighting is just 30 kilometres (20 miles) away.
They work all day, sometimes until midnight. Some
sleep on site, on camp beds. And every day, vehicles come from the front to
collect the material produced here.
"We all have a loved one at war, and whoever
defends our land at the front is our brother," Bella says defiantly.
Meanwhile, the sewing machine hums peacefully
beneath her fingers.



