Nagorno-Karabakh’s tragedy has echoes of Europe’s dark past. But a remedy lies in Europe too | Nathalie Tocci
As more than 100,000 people flee to avoid rule by Azerbaijan, it's time for the EU to consider the prospect of membership for Armenia
The president of the self-declared Republic of Artsakh", Samvel Shahramanyan, has dissolved all institutions of the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh and almost all Karabakh Armenians are now thought to fled the enclave being reintegrated into Azerbaijan. What lessons can be drawn from the tragic epilogue of this three decades-long secessionist conflict in Europe?
The images of long queues of cars escaping mountainous Karabakh to neighbouring Armenia bring back dark memories of ethnic cleansing that Europe thought had been relegated to its past. Just as Russia's invasion of Ukraine, with its imperial follies, trenches and wanton destruction, catapulted Europe back into the harrowing days of the world wars, the flight of ethnic Armenians rewinds us to the Balkans of the 1990s - or even further back, to the end of the Ottoman empire during the first world war.
Nathalie Tocci is a Guardian columnist. She is director of the Italian Institute of International Affairs and an honorary professor at the University of Tubingen
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