The Pak Banker

New Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire jeopardise­d

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A new ceasefire in the mountain enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh appeared to be in jeopardy on Monday, with ethnic Armenian forces and Azerbaijan accusing each other of renewed shelling.

The ceasefire was agreed on Saturday after a deal brokered by Russia a week earlier failed to halt the worst fighting in the South Caucasus since the 1990s. More than 1,000 people have been killed since fighting began on Sept. 27. The failure to halt the fighting has raised fears of a humanitari­an crisis and put new strains on ties between Turkey, which strongly backs Azerbaijan, and its allies in NATO, which want the fighting to stop.

Russia, which has a defence pact with Armenia, could also be at risk of being sucked into a regional war. Officials in NagornoKar­abakh, a breakaway enclave of Azerbaijan that is populated and controlled by ethnic Armenians, said Azeri forces were shelling their positions in northern and southern areas of the line of contact that divides them.

The Azeri defence ministry said Armenian forces had shelled its positions in the Garanboy, Terter and Aghdam regions of Azerbaijan overnight and the Agjebedin region was being shelled on Monday morning. The reports could not immediatel­y be verified.

A ceasefire brokered in Moscow earlier this month was aimed at letting the sides swap detainees and bodies of those killed in the clashes, but it had little impact on the fighting around the enclave. Shelling has also hit areas inside deep inside Azerbaijan, Azeri authoritie­s say, increasing concerns about the security of pipelines that carry Azeri natural gas and oil to world markets.

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