The National - News

Armenia and Azerbaijan trade blame for new Nagorno-Karabakh truce collapse

- THE NATIONAL

Armenia and Azerbaijan accused each other of breaching a new humanitari­an truce in the bitter fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The truce came into force yesterday at midnight local time, but Yerevan’s Defence Ministry spokeswoma­n Shushan Stepanyan said that Azerbaijan fired shells and rockets in the early hours of yesterday, minutes after the cessation began.

Azerbaijan’s state news agency reported that mortars and artillery were fired by Armenia at the south-western district of Jabrayil, as well as at villages along the Aras River.

Saturday’s truce declaratio­n followed an escalation in fighting and a missile strike that killed 13 civilians, in Azerbaijan’s second largest city of Ganja.

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev vowed to take revenge for the attack.

The attacks in the early hours of yesterday morning, which included a strike on the western Azeri city of Mingacevir, came hours after Azerbaijan­i forces shelled Stepanaker­t, the capital of ethnic-Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh.

A previous truce brokered by Russia last Saturday to allow the warring sides to exchange prisoners and bodies and begin talks quickly broke down, with both sides accusing the other of breaches.

Azerbaijan and the Armenian separatist­s who control the Nagorno- Karabakh region have been locked in a bitter battle over the fate of the mountainou­s area since a war in the 1990s during which 30,000 people were killed.

Clashes erupted again three weeks ago and have killed at least 700 people, threatened to draw in regional powers Russia and Turkey, and raised alarm over the failure of a decades-long internatio­nal mediation process.

The real death toll is probably much higher because Azerbaijan has not published the fatalities among its soldiers.

With neither side making decisive gains – and a smokescree­n of claims and countercla­ims of victory blurring events on the front lines – there is no telling when the fighting will end.

In Azerbaijan’s frontline town of Terter, residents said there had been some shelling around midday but that yesterday was the quietest it had been in several days.

Azerbaijan says it has retaken significan­t territory in areas along the frontline, including two regional centres – Jabrayil and Fuzuli – in a no-man’s land splitting Nagorno- Karabakh proper from territory under Azeri control.

Baku also claims to have taken several areas of strategic high ground.

Analysts say its gains may be enough for Baku to declare a halt to the fighting before winter sets in, when conditions on the front will be harsh.

It could then agree to return to the negotiatin­g table.

It is unclear what set off the latest round of fighting but Armenia has accused Turkey of encouragin­g its longtime ally Azerbaijan to launch an offensive to retake Nagorno- Karabakh.

Ankara has also sent Syrian fighters as mercenarie­s to bolster Baku’s forces, as it did in Libya to bolster the forces of the Government of National Accord to widespread internatio­nal condemnati­on.

France, Russia and the US have tried for decades to mediate a resolution to the dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh under the Minsk Group, but negotiatio­ns have long been stalled.

 ?? AP ?? A man stands near what is left of a house that was hit by shelling in Stepanaker­t, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh
AP A man stands near what is left of a house that was hit by shelling in Stepanaker­t, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh

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