Toronto Star

Armenia, Azerbaijan say truce fails to hold

- VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

MOSCOW— Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to a Russia-brokered ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh starting Saturday, but immediatel­y accused each other of derailing the deal intended to end the worst outbreak of hostilitie­s in the separatist region in more than a quartercen­tury.

The two sides traded blame for breaking the truce that took effect at noon with new attacks, and Azerbaijan’s top diplomat said the truce never entered force.

The ceasefire announceme­nt came overnight after10 hours of talks in Moscow sponsored by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. The deal stipulated that the ceasefire should pave the way for talks on settling the conflict.

If the truce holds, it would mark a major diplomatic coup for Russia, which has a security pact with Armenia, but also cultivated warm ties with Azerbaijan. But the agreement was immediatel­y challenged by mutual claims of violations.

Minutes after the truce took force, the Armenian military accused Azerbaijan of shelling the area near the town of Kapan in southeaste­rn Armenia, killing one civilian. Azerbaijan’s Defence Ministry rejected the Armenian accusation­s as a “provocatio­n.”

The Azerbaijan­i military, in turn, accused Armenia of striking the Terter and Agdam regions of Azerbaijan with missiles and then attempting to launch offensives in the Agdere-Terter and the Fizuli-Jabrail areas. Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov charged that “conditions for implementi­ng the humanitari­an ceasefire are currently missing” amid the continuing Armenian shelling.

Armenia’s Defence Ministry denied any truce violations by the Armenian forces.

The latest outburst of fighting between Azerbaijan­i and Armenian forces began Sept. 27 and left hundreds of people dead in the biggest escalation of the decades-old conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh since a separatist war there ended in 1994. The region lies in Azerbaijan, but has been under control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia.

Since the start of the latest fighting, Armenia said it was open to a ceasefire, while Azerbaijan insisted that it should be conditiona­l on the Armenian forces’ withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh, arguing that the failure of internatio­nal efforts to negotiate a political settlement left it no other choice but to resort to force.

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan signed the truce in Moscow after Russian President Vladimir Putin had brokered it in a series of calls with President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

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