ArmInfo. The damage to houses in the village of Tsamdzor is a consequence of large-scale looting and deliberate damage to the property of Armenians in occupied Artsakh by Azerbaijanis. This is stated in the Monument Watch report, based on new satellite images that recorded the destruction in the village of Tsamdzor.
According to the data, back in 2020, the village was safe and sound, and judging by the satellite images, serious destruction appeared since August 2021. "Analysis of satellite photographs taken in February 2025 confirms that the Azerbaijani side destroyed a significant part of residential buildings in the village of Tsamdzor in the Hadrut region of occupied Artsakh. The looting is carried out mainly by military personnel located in this territory, as well as construction groups," the publication emphasizes.
According to Monument Watch, Azerbaijan's actions since 2021 have left many homes in Tsamdzor roofless. There are no signs of heavy machinery, indicating a gradual and systematic looting of the village. Satellite images also show that the Surb Astvatsatsin church remains intact, but it is noted that it is at risk of destruction given the general state of the village.
In this vein, the Monument Watch report emphasizes that the destruction of the village of Tsamdzor in the Hadrut region constitutes a series of interconnected crimes committed by Azerbaijan both during the war and throughout the occupation. These actions violate international norms of cultural heritage preservation and the principles of authenticity and integrity established by UNESCO, as well as decisions of the International Court of Justice, including the 1965 International Court of Justice's decision on violations of the Convention on All Forms of Racial Discrimination.
"The destruction of village houses and cultural property is also considered a serious violation of the laws and customs of the Rome Statute applicable in international armed conflicts (Article 8, part 2, paragraphs B and E)," the report explains.
It is also emphasized that the destruction of the village may be qualified as genocide under international law, since the problem of genocide is also considered in the context of the destruction of cultural heritage sites. In this regard, an excerpt from the guide to the analysis of the provisions of the Rome Statute on cultural heritage is provided: "Crimes against or affecting cultural heritage are often associated with or committed in the context of genocide, involving acts aimed at the physical destruction of members of the group in whole or in part. They include murder, serious bodily or mental injury, deliberately creating poor living conditions, deliberately preventing births within the group, and deliberately forcibly transferring children from one group to another."
Back in the summer of 2024, the Caucasus Heritage Watch (CHW) organization in its 7th report on the situation around Artsakh signaled a 75% increase in cases of destruction of Armenian heritage in the occupied territories of the NKR by Azerbaijan, and a 29% increase in the number of objects classified as under threat. Let us recall that on September 19, 2023, Azerbaijan, under the pretext of an "anti-terrorist operation", committed another act of aggression against Artsakh. This was preceded by an almost 10-month blockade of the unrecognized republic. Since the enemy aggression that began in the fall of 2020, which in September 2023 ended in the complete ethnic cleansing of Artsakh, over 150 thousand Artsakh residents have lost their homeland and become refugees.