Sunday, August 17, 2025

Nagorno-Karabakh: Azerbaijan demolishes 25 Soviet-era monuments

In Khankendi (known as Stepanakert), the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, 25 monuments and busts erected in memory of prominent Soviet figures and soldiers of Armenian origin have reportedly been completely dismantled.

The Artsakh Culture and Tourism Development Agency announced on its Facebook account that 25 monuments and busts erected in Khankendi, located in Nagorno-Karabakh (known as Artsakh by Armenians), for heroes of the Great Patriotic War and other prominent figures have been demolished.
 
The statement noted, “As of July 15, all 25 monuments and busts erected in memory of distinguished figures who shaped the city’s cultural identity for decades have disappeared from the capital of Artsakh.”

Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Aykhan Hajizada stated that the bust of the painter of Armenian origin, Ivan Aivazovsky (Hovhannes Ayvazyan), was “illegally placed” in the region by Russian peacekeeping forces without the permission of the Azerbaijani side.

The dismantled monuments include those of military figures such as Marshal Hovhannes Bagramyan, Admiral Ivan Isakov, and pilot Nelson Stepanyan, as well as cultural figures like musician Genrikh Barkhudaryan, poet and writer Hovhannes Tumanyan, and painter Ivan Aivazovsky.

Additionally, monuments to Bolsheviks and revolutionaries, including Stepan Shaumyan and Aleksandr Myasnikyan, as well as statues of Nagorno-Karabakh’s military leaders like Khristofor Ivanyan and Anatoliy Zinevich, were also noted to have been removed.

The statement adds that while the official fate of the sculptures has not yet been clarified, considering Azerbaijan’s ongoing policy of erasing Armenian cultural heritage, it is highly likely that the statues have been permanently destroyed.

The fate of these sculptures, created by artists including Russian masters, is unknown, with the agency suggesting they may have been completely destroyed.

Source: panarmenian.net, harici.com.tr