Azerbaijan follows Turkey’s Syria playbook in Nagorno- Karabakh - report

Azerbaijan is following Turkey’s Syria playbook in seeking to erase the cultural and religious identity of areas recently captured in the disputed Nagorno- Karabakh region, Armenian news outlet Massis Post said on Thursday.
In
September, Azerbaijan launched a successful military offensive against
pro-Armenia forces in Nagorno- Karabakh, regaining control of much of the
territory, including the second largest settlement of Shusha.
In
a recent visit to the region, Azeri President İlham Aliyev ordered the
destruction of “historical inscriptions on the Armenian churches, calling them
fake”, the Massis Post said.
Turkey
provided crucial military support to Azerbaijan during the conflict. And the
Azeri presence in Nagorno-Karabakh has come to closely resemble the Turkish
occupation of the predominantly Kurdish region of Afrin in Syria, the news
outlet said.
Turkey
took control of Afrin in March 2018 after a cross-border incursion against
Kurdish-led forces known as the People’s Protection Units (YPG).
The
region is now dominated by Turkish-backed Syrian militia groups, which are
accused by the United Nations of atrocities including looting, extortion, and
desecration of cultural sites.
According
to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) monitoring group, more than
2,500 Syrian militants were also deployed by Turkey to fight alongside the
Azeri armed forces in Nagorno- Karabakh.
“One could have thought the only goal
of sending the Syrian mercenaries to Nagorno-Karabakh was to instruct the
Azerbaijanis in the ways of committing war crimes,” Massis Post said.
Azerbaijan
now aims to “make it impossible for the uprooted people to return to their
homeland,” the Armenian news outlet said.
“Ankara
has made every effort to achieve this in Syria. Baku must not be allowed to do
the same in Armenia.”