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I think Thomas de Waal's writings in his famous book "Black Garden" (page 62-63) about those events based on Arif Yunus can be used as a reference:
"Armenia in 1988 had been far more chaotic and violent, and dozens of Azerbaijanis had died in a savage few weeks at the end of November and the beginning of December. In painstaking research carried out over two years with Azerbaijani refugees, Arif Yunusov compiled lists of the dead and injured. The overwhelming majority of the casualties were from 1988. Yunusov concluded that 127 Azerbaijanis had been murdered by Armenians in this time, generally beaten, burned, or killed. In the most horrific incident—which has still to be fully re-searched—twelve Azerbaijanis from the village of Vartan in northeastern Armenia were burned to death in November 1988. Yunusov’s total Azerbaijani death toll is 216; among that number he includes those who
froze to death as they walked into Azerbaijan, committed suicide, died subsequently in Azerbaijani hospitals, or were still missing three years later."
The article says Azerbaijanis use the term massacre for this. I don't see any of the English sources in the references using the term pogrom. So I am wondering why the article title uses that term? RaffiKojian (talk) 14:33, 12 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]