Tensions mount in Caucasus dispute
Armenia denies claim that it targeted cities in Azerbaijan that lie outside conflict zone.
BAKU, Azerbaijan — The f ighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces continued Sunday over the separatist territory of NagornoKarabakh, with Azerbaijan accusing Armenia of targeting cities that are far beyond the conflict zone.
Hikmet Hajiyev, an aide to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, said Sunday that Armenia targeted the cities of Ganja and Mingachevir with missile strikes.
Ganja, Azerbaijan’s second- largest city and home to several hundred thousand people, is roughly 60 miles from Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno- Karabakh. Mingachevir is about the same distance.
The clashes, which erupted Sept. 27 and have killed dozens of civilians, mark the biggest escalation in the decades- old conf lict over the region, which lies within Azerbaijan but is controlled by local ethnic Armenian forces who are backed by Armenia.
Hajiyev on Sunday tweeted a video depicting damaged buildings, which he said was the result of “Armenia’s massive missile attacks against dense residential areas” in Ganja. It wasn’t immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the video.
In another tweet Sunday evening, he said that Armenian forces also hit Mingachevir, which “hosts a water reservoir and key electricity plant,” with a missile strike.
Armenia’s Defense Ministry denied the claims. Spokeswoman Shushan Stepanian wrote on Facebook that “no f ire was opened from Armenia in the direction of Azerbaijan” and called the accusations “desperate convulsions of the Azerbaijani side.”
The leader of NagornoKarabakh, Arayik Harutyunyan, said on Facebook that he ordered “rocket attacks to neutralize military objects” in Ganja but later told his forces to stop f iring to avoid civilian casualties.
His spokesman Vahram Poghosyan told Armenian media on Sunday evening that there was no reason for Nagorno- Karabakh forces to target Mingachevir.
Azerbaijani officials denied that any military objects had been hit in Ganja but said the attack caused damage to civilian infrastructure. One civilian was killed, and 32 sustained injuries, authorities said.
“Opening f ire on the territory of Azerbaijan from the territory of Armenia is clearly provocative and expands the zone of hostil
ities,” Azerbaijani Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov said in a statement Sunday.
According to Hajiyev, no serious damage was inf licted on the infrastructure in Mingachevir, but “civilians [ have been] wounded.”
As the f ighting resumed Sunday morning, Armenian officials accused Azerbaijan of carrying out strikes on Stepanakert and targeting the civilian population there. Harutyunyan said that in response, NagornoKarabakh’s forces would target “military facilities permanently located in major cities of Azerbaijan.”
In a statement issued later Sunday, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry rejected accusations of targeting civilians and civilian infra
structure.
Aliyev, the Azerbaijani president, tweeted Sunday that the country’s troops “liberated from occupation the city of Jabrayil and several surrounding villages.” Nagorno- Karabakh’s officials rejected the claim as untrue, saying the territory’s army “is controlling the situation in all directions.”
Nagorno- Karabakh officials have said nearly 200 servicemen on their side have died in the clashes so far. Eighteen civilians have been killed and more than 90 wounded.
Azerbaijani authorities haven’t given details on their military casualties but said 24 civilians were killed and 111 wounded on their side.
Nagorno- Karabakh was a designated autonomous region within Azerbaijan during the Soviet era. It claimed independence from Azerbaijan in 1991, about three months before the Soviet Union’s collapse. A fullscale war that broke out in 1992 killed an estimated 30,000 people.
By the time the war ended in 1994, Armenian forces held not only Nagorno- Karabakh but also substantial areas outside the territory’s formal borders, including Jabrayil, the town Azerbaijan claimed to have taken on Sunday.
This week’s f ighting has prompted calls for a ceasef ire from around the world. On Thursday, leaders of Russia, France and the U. S. — co- chairs of the so- called Minsk Group, which was set up in 1992 by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to resolve the conf lict — issued a joint statement calling for an immediate cease- f ire and “resuming substantive negotiations ... under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group co- chairs.”
Aliyev has repeatedly said that Armenia’s withdrawal from NagornoKarabakh is the sole condition to end the fighting.
Armenian officials allege that Turkey is involved in the conf lict and is sending f ighters from Syria to the region. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has said that “a cease- f ire can be established only if Turkey is removed from the South Caucasus.”
Poghosyan, the spokesman for Nagorno- Karabakh’s leader, said Sunday evening on Facebook that since Azerbaijan has involved “terrorist mercenaries” in the region, “this means that the current situation gives us a legitimate right to move our operations to the entire territory of Azerbaijan to clear it of terrorist groups.”
Turkey has denied sending arms or foreign f ighters, while publicly siding with Azerbaijan in the dispute.
On Sunday, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry condemned the attack on Ganja, saying it was proof of Armenia’s disregard for the law. Ankara accused Armenia of attacking civilian residential areas and claimed that the country could commit crimes against humanity.
“Armenia is the biggest barrier to peace and stability in the region,” the ministry said.