Armenia on 18 November. The battle was a key point in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War and was seen as a significant blow by both the Armenian military and the wider Armenian society. The Armenian army started to disintegrate and two days after the battle, the Prime Minister of Armenia,
Nikol Pashinyan, announced the signing of a ceasefire agreement with Azerbaijan. According to the Armenian political scientist Suren Sargsyan, the ramifications of Shusha's loss was difficult for the Armenians to grasp. Sargsyan added that it would lead to demands from the
Armenian opposition for a change of government. In the aftermath of the war, many Armenians turned against Pashinyan, with
violent protests erupting throughout the country, and a common claim of him "selling out" Shusha became popular among his opponents. A series of military authorities backed Pashinyan, contending that Armenia's military position was much direr than many people believed. Pashinyan, in response, stated that after the Azerbaijani forces took control of Shusha,
Stepanakert was left defenseless, and that twenty to thirty thousand Armenian soldiers in
Askeran and
Martuni would've been under siege, adding that the lives of the Armenian soldiers were more important for him. Artsakh's self-declared president,
Arayik Harutyunyan, also pushed back against allegations of treason, stating that the ethnic Armenian forces lacked the manpower to defend the city. In the meanwhile, Putin also stated that Pashinyan had the opportunity to sign a ceasefire agreement with Azerbaijan in October, with the Armenian forces still controlling Shusha, though with the Azerbaijani refugees of the
First Nagorno-Karabakh War returning to the city. Putin added that Pashinyan rejected this offer, which Pashinyan confirmed later on. Pashinyan, in response to the allegations of Shusha being "sold out," stated that Shusha was an "unhappy and dull city," asking if the Armenians needed it or not, Then, in January 2021, at a meeting held by the
Armenian government in the
parliament, Pashinyan stated in response to a question from
Naira Zohrabyan, a member of
Prosperous Armenia, that "there was no option in the whole negotiation process to prevent the Azerbaijani refugees from returning to Shusha," adding that before the Armenian forces
seized control of Shusha in 1992, "90% or more of the city's residents were Azerbaijanis."
Aram Sargsyan,
Mikayel Minasyan, Naira Zohrabyan,
Robert Kocharyan, and
Zaruhi Postanjyan, criticising Pashinyan. At a briefing, local journalists asked the MPs representing
My Step Alliance, which is led by Pashinyan, whether or not they had "any doubts" of Shusha being "an Armenian city," though left the briefing without answering the question. On 29 January, a journalist protested Pashinyan's statement in front of the building of the Armenian government. Vice-president of the
Armenian National Assembly,
Alen Simonyan, stated that the local media had "misinterpreted" Pashinyan's statement and taken his words "out of context," adding that "provocations that exist in the media should be related to journalism." Pashinyan also responded to the public backlash via
Facebook live, calling it a "
media manipulation." On 3 December 2020, Deputy Head of the Shushi Province, Samvel Harutyunyan, stated that about 4,500 Armenians were displaced from Shusha. Later, in January 2021, the Armenian Mayor of Shusha, Artsvik Sargsyan, stated that the Armenian refugees from Shusha, who "didn't know what was going on," and were thinking that they were "leaving for a few days, soon the issues would be resolved, and they would return to their homes," had faced with unfavourable living conditions, and high rent prices, as well as lack of food and clothing in Armenia despite the efforts of the charity organisations. In January 2021, former director of the Armenian
NSS,
Argishti Kyaramyan, claimed that the members of the
Homeland detachment, led by another former director of the NSS,
Artur Vanetsyan, had left their positions during the battle, though Vanetsyan, and other members of the detachment later denied this claim.
Azerbaijan , Azerbaijan on 8 November. In contrast, the announcement of the city's capture by the Azerbaijani president
Ilham Aliyev led to celebration among the Azerbaijanis, with flag-waving, singing, and the sounding of car horns in
Baku, the country's capital. A wreath-laying ceremony took place at the
Alley of Honor in Baku with the participation of Aliyev and the Vice President
Mehriban Aliyeva. Ships moored in the
Bay of Baku honked their horns, and the Azerbaijanis in
Moscow celebrated with a firework display, while cars decorated with the flags of Azerbaijan and Turkey rallied through
Brooklyn,
New York. In Azerbaijan, some political figures labelled the battle the
Divorce in the Mountains (), in reference to the Armenian name
Operation Wedding in the Mountains (
Armenian: «Հարսանիք լեռներում» ռազմագործողություն) for the 1992 capture of the city. On 20 November, at a plenary session of the
Azerbaijani National Assembly, a draft bill on amendments to the bill "On the establishment of orders and medals of the Republic of Azerbaijan" was submitted for discussion. The
For the Liberation of Shusha Medal was established on the same day in the first reading in accordance with the bill on the occasion of Azerbaijan recording a victory in the battle and winning the war, with Ilham Aliyev proposing the medal's name. On 1 December, the Azerbaijani singer
Samra Rahimli, known for representing Azerbaijan in
Eurovision Song Contest 2016, released a song titled
Shusha, we are back (). 27 September and 10 November were declared
Remembrance Day and
Victory Day respectively, although the latter's date was changed to 8 November as the previous date overlapped with
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's
Memorial Day in
Turkey. On 4 December, at 12:00 (
GMT+4) local time, a
moment of silence was held in Azerbaijan to commemorate the fallen soldiers of the war. In this regard,
flags were lowered across the country, and traffic halted, while the ships moored in the Bay of Baku, as well as cars honked their horns. The Azerbaijani soldiers also stood in front of the
Shusha fortress and commemorated those killed in the war. On 8 December, the Azerbaijani authorities announced that the new station in the
Baku Metro will be named
8 November at the suggestion of the President Aliyev. On 10 December, during the
Baku Victory Parade, the first flag hoisted in Shusha when the Azerbaijan forces seized the city's control was declared the
Victory Banner of Azerbaijan in the war, which the personnel of the
Azerbaijani Armed Forces, led by
Zaur Mammadov, who also took part in the battle and was appointed the city's commandant, marched with it in
Azadliq Square. Servicemen of the
Special Forces of the Ministry of Defense, led by the Commander of the Special Forces, Lieutenant General
Hikmat Mirzayev, who took part in the battle, also marched in the parade. In November, the
State Agency of Azerbaijan Automobile Roads started the construction of a four-lane highway to Shusha, labelled the "Victory Road", which begins in
Alxanlı, and takes a route via
Fuzuli, and the
Topkhana Forest. A groundbreaking ceremony for the highway, which is planned to stretch and be wide, occurred on 24 November in the presence of the Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev, and the First-Vice President
Mehriban Aliyeva. The road will also link up with the
Baku–
Shirvan–
Saatly–
Horadiz route. It is planned to get finished by September 2021. while the organizers of the
Turkvision Song Contest stated that they were exploring the possibility of holding the contest's 2021 version in Shusha, and in January 2021, the
Azerbaijani Ministry of Culture started preparatory activities on the
Khari Bulbul Festival and Days of the Poetry of Vagif. In December, the chairman of the Public Association Organization for the Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments in the Occupied Territories of Azerbaijan, Faig Ismayilov, stated that the
Azerbaijani refugees of the
First Nagorno-Karabakh War from Shusha will start returning to the city at least by summer 2021, while the chairman of the
Azerbaijani Community of Nagorno-Karabakh and the Azerbaijani MP,
Tural Ganjaliyev, stated that they were planning to relocate the community to the city in the near future. On 5 January 2021, Shusha was declared the cultural capital of Azerbaijan, while the Director General of the
Islamic World Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (ICESCO), Salim Al-Malik, proposed to declare the city as the cultural capital of the
Muslim world, and on 19 January, Secretary General of the
Turkic Council, Baghdad Amreev, during a teleconference with President Aliyev, stated that Shusha will be declared the cultural capital of the
Turkic world in 2022. On 15 January, the President Aliyev and the First-Vice President Aliyeva visited Shusha. The next day, busts of
Khurshidbanu Natavan,
Uzeyir Hajibeyov and
Bulbul, which were kept in the yard of the
National Art Museum in Baku since the Armenian forces captured Shusha in 1992, were returned to the city, while Aliyev hoisted the
Azerbaijani flag in the city centre. On 27 January, Aliyev appointed Aydin Karimov as his special representative in the city.
Role of Russia test launching in
Kapustin Yar, 2018. On 9 November, the day when the ceasefire agreement was signed, the Azerbaijani forces in
Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic accidentally
shot down a
Russian Mil Mi-24 attack helicopter near
Yeraskh, in
Armenia. According to
Anton Troianovski and
Carlotta Gall of
The New York Times, this potentially gave Russia a reason to intervene in the war, and the Russian president
Vladimir Putin delivered an
ultimatum to the Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev. According to Troianovski and Gall, in this ultimatum, Russia stated that if Azerbaijan did not cease its operations after seizing control of Shusha, it would intervene. The same night, an unknown missile hit an open area in
Khyrdalan, near Baku, without causing any injuries, according to Azerbaijani sources. Also, yet again on the same day, a video emerged on the social media apparently showing the Armenian forces launching a Russian-made
Iskander missile into Azerbaijan. The former Head of the Military Control Service of the Armenian MoD
Movses Hakobyan, right after resigning from his post on 19 November 2020, confirmed the use of an Iskander missile on Azerbaijan by Armenia, though he did not say where the missile hit. According to Can Kasapoğlu, the Director of Security and Defence Studies Program at the Centre for Economics and Foreign Policy Studies, an
Istanbul-based independent
think tank, Armenia could've used Iskander missiles only with Russia's consent.
Wagner Group On 28 September 2020, Russian media reported that Russian
private military companies were ready to fight against Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh. On 1 October,
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, citing a
Wagner Group source, claimed they were already in Nagorno-Karabakh and participating in hostilities. The Russian military analyst
Pavel Felgenhauer also stated that Wagner contractors were sent to support the Armenian forces as
ATGM operators. After the war, in December 2020, a photo of a Wagner mercenary, apparently taken in front a church in
Shusha during the war, appeared on the internet. Also, the Russian media leaked a message, apparently describing how the Armenian government refused to pay the Russian mercenaries for their work, and how, because of this, some of the Wagner mercenaries intended to return to Russia or defect to the Azerbaijani side. The Russian media reported that, in November, there were about 500 Russian mercenaries fighting on the Armenian side, and some 300 Russian mercenaries had taken part in the Battle of Shusha, with Victor Zlobov, a retired captain of the
Russian Armed Forces, stating that Shusha was "defended mainly thanks to the Russian volunteers." The Russian businessman
Yevgeny Prigozhin, who has been linked to the Wagner Group, denied any involvement of the Russian PMCs in the war.
Peacekeeping On 13 November, following the ceasefire agreement, the Russian peacekeepers from the
15th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade deployed to the region set up an observation post on the outskirts of the city. The Russian peacekeeping forces also took control of the
Lachin corridor, which, according to the statement, did not affect Shusha. A new road through the Lachin corridor is planned for construction, which will bypass Shusha, unlike the current road that runs along the city's outskirts. A checkpoint located at a road going through the
Ganja Gate, the northern entrance to the city, was guarded by the Azerbaijani servicemen. The first major breach of the ceasefire that was confirmed by the Russian peacekeeping forces in the region occurred on 11 December, in an area close to Shusha, which became an Artsakh holdout after the war. The Azerbaijani forces seized control of
Hin Tagher (Köhnə Tağlar) on 12 December, with some clashes continuing in the area. Both sides accused each other of reigniting the conflict. The Russian peacekeeping forces requested both sides to respect the ceasefire. On 13 December, the Russian peacekeeping contingent took control of Hin Tagher. However, the next day, the Russian Ministry of Defence released a map showing some of the area outside of the boundaries of the peacekeeping mission, and it came under Azerbaijan's control.
War crime allegations In mid-November, a video of a wounded Azerbaijani soldier Amin Musayev receiving first aid by Ukrainian journalist Alexander Kharchenko and Armenian soldiers in the outskirts of Shusha after the ceasefire came into force was spread on social media platforms. Following this, a video was released showing Musayev being abused inside a vehicle. It is reported that he was lying on the ground in the car and asked: "where are we going?" In response, the alleged Armenian soldier said, "If you behave well, go home," and cursed, after which it became clear that the Azerbaijani soldier had been kicked. On 18 November, a representative of the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Yerevan said that information about this person was "being investigated." The ICRC's representative in Yerevan, Zara Amatuni, declined to say whether she had any information about Musayev. The Artsakh ombudsman said he had no information about the Azerbaijani soldier, but that if he was injured, he was "probably in hospital in Armenia." The
Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that the issue was being investigated and will be reported to the relevant international organizations. According to the ministry, "the information about the torture of prisoners is first checked for accuracy and brought to the attention of relevant international organizations." On 25 November, ICRC's representatives visited Musayev and Karimov in Yerevan. On 5 December, the family of Musayev was informed of his condition through ICRC. According to a reported copy of the letter sent by Musayev, he stated that his condition was well. Azerbaijan had officially accused the Armenian side of ill-treating the Azerbaijani POWs. Amin Musayev, and several other Azerbaijani POWs had stated that they were tortured by their Armenian captors until being transferred back to Azerbaijan.
Dilgam Asgarov, a Russian citizen of Azerbaijani descent, who was detained by the Armenian-allied forces alongside Shahbaz Guliyev, an Azerbaijani citizen, in 2014, during an incident in
Kalbajar, in an interview he gave after being released, also stated that the Armenian captors had tortured the Azerbaijani POWs. in 2013. On 15 November, the
Armenian Apostolic Church claimed that the
Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, which was shelled earlier, and
Kanach Zham were defaced after the Azerbaijani forces took control of Shusha, prompting a statement by the
Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs denouncing the alleged act.
Human Rights Watch confirmed that ”Azerbaijani forces attacked a church in the city of Shushi on October 8, 2020”, calling it a “possible war crime”, specifying that it was hit twice ”in what appears to be a deliberate targeting in violation of the laws of war”. Azerbaijan's president Aliyev stated that the Christian churches would be protected, this was seconded by Azerbaijan's Acting
Minister of Culture Anar Karimov who, in an interview with
France 24 on 1 December, brought the Armenian
Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church in Baku as an example and added that the
Christian religious monuments in Karabakh were "inherited from their ancestors." On 14 January 2021, in an interview with
Azeri Press Agency, he said that Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, among other Christian monuments, would be restored by the government. In May 2021, Ghazanchetsots Cathedral dome and the cross were removed, Azerbaijani authorities stated the cathedral was being reconstructed to "restore" its “original” form. The
Armenian Foreign Ministry called these actions of Azerbaijan an act of “vandalism aimed at depriving the Shushi Cathedral of its Armenian identity”, pointing out that it was done without consulting with the Armenian Apostolic Church, thus violating the rights of its congregation, also denying access to UNESCO mission of independent experts. The
USCIRF also expressed concern over these actions undertaken by Azerbaijan. In January 2021, the Azerbaijani officials claimed that the
Mamayi Mosque and a nearby fountain were vandalized by the Armenian forces. == International reactions ==