Karabakh fighting turns residents into ‘vagabond’ refugees

Some 150 people from Nagorno-Karabakh republic have been living in five guesthouses in Dilijan for several days already. (AFP)
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Updated 09 October 2020
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Karabakh fighting turns residents into ‘vagabond’ refugees

  • The worst fighting since an all-out war in the early 1990s has seen hundreds of families escape across the border into Armenia
  • It has already cost hundreds of lives

TEGH, Armenia: We’ve become vagabonds,” says Knarik Movsisyan, one among the tens of thousands forced to flee fighting between Armenian separatists and the Azerbaijani army in the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.
The worst fighting since an all-out war in the early 1990s has seen hundreds of families escape across the border into Armenia.
It has already cost hundreds of lives, and authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh say half the population — some 70,000 people — have fled, mostly women and children.
Many are in Tegh, a peaceful scene of cows and rural hills, though distant explosions can now be heard from over the frontier.
“There are around 800 refugees in the village. Children, women, grandparents. The young are still back there, fighting in the war,” said one local resident.
Gyulvart, 49, came with her two youngest children, but most of the family stayed behind. She is desperate to return as soon as possible.
“My son, my husband, all my close relatives, all the young people are still there,” she said.
“I’m afraid that I’m raising my children for a war that will not end,” she said with tears in her eyes.
For Knarik, a nurse at a rural clinic in southern Karabakh, it is the second time she has had to flee in her life.
The first was when she lost her home and her parents to the earthquake that devastated northern Armenia in 1988.
“We want peace, we want our army to win and it will win,” she told AFP.

An Armenian-majority enclave within Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh declared independence from Azerbaijan after the breakup of the Soviet Union, triggering a brutal conflict that ended in a 1994 cease-fire but has never been fully resolved.
The latest fighting came suddenly, leaving many without time to prepare.
“We left in bare feet — we were wearing slippers — can you imagine?” said Maro Hagopi Petrosyan, 67, now in the town of Dilijan, around 100 kilometers (60 miles) from the Armenian capital Yerevan.
“It’s terrible... the house, the roads are in ruins. Even if we wanted to go back, we can’t.”
Kristina, who fled the town of Martuni, said she saw a bomb fall on her neighbor’s house, killing him and his child.
She hid in her mother-in-law’s cellar for hours before feeling safe to run.
Zabella Bejanyan, 53, stayed in the forest for three days, sleeping in her car with her six children.
She is determined to make it home as soon as possible, “even if there is nothing left, no house, it doesn’t matter,” she said.
“The important thing is that the children are safe and we are alive. We will return to our land,” she vowed.


UN chief launches first global, independent scientific panel on artificial intelligence

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UN chief launches first global, independent scientific panel on artificial intelligence

  • Secretary-General Antonio Guterres nominates 40 experts to serve on body ‘dedicated to helping close the AI knowledge gap and assess the real impacts of AI’
  • It will ‘help the world separate fact from fakes, and science from slop … at a moment when reliable, unbiased understanding of AI has never been more critical,’ he adds

NEW YORK CITY: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday formally launched what he described as the only global, independent scientific body focused on artificial intelligence, and submitted his recommendations for the experts to serve on it.

“It will be the first global, fully independent scientific body dedicated to helping close the AI knowledge gap and assess the real impacts of AI across economies and societies,” he told reporters in New York.

“And this could not be more urgent. AI is moving at the speed of light. No country can see the full picture alone.”

The Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence was established by the UN General Assembly through a resolution in August. Guterres said he has now submitted a list of 40 experts from all regions as his proposed candidates for the new body, which was mandated by world leaders under the UN’s Pact for the Future.

The panel is intended to provide authoritative, science-based analysis at a time when AI is developing rapidly and reshaping economies, governance and social life, but regulatory approaches remain fragmented.

Guterres underscored the need for shared understanding among countries to help develop effective safeguards, promote innovation for the common good, and strengthen international cooperation.

The UN said the panel would serve as a global reference point, helping policymakers and the public distinguish between reliable evidence and misinformation, and grounding debates on AI in independent scientific assessment.

The initiative comes amid growing concern over the societal, economic and security risks posed by unchecked technological competition.

“We need shared understandings to build effective guardrails, unlock innovation for the common good, and foster cooperation,” Guterres said.

“The panel will help the world separate fact from fakes, and science from slop. It will provide an authoritative reference point at a moment when reliable, unbiased understanding of AI has never been more critical.”

The proposed members of the panel were selected following an open global call that attracted more than 2,600 applicants, whose expertise spanned fields including machine learning, data governance, public health, cybersecurity, child development and human rights. The chosen candidates are expected to serve in a personal capacity, independent of governments, businesses or other institutions.

The panel will operate on an accelerated timeline, with its first report due in time to inform a Global Dialogue on AI Governance scheduled for July. UN officials said the findings were expected to support international efforts to build common ground on AI governance during a period of heightened geopolitical tensions and technological rivalry.

Guterres framed the initiative as part of a broader push to ensure that AI is shaped collectively, guided by scientific evidence and global solidarity, rather than allowing its development to outpace international cooperation.