New Straits Times

NAGARNO-KARABAKH FLARE-UP

World leaders call to halt fighting between Azerbaijan, Armenian rebels

- YEREVAN/BAKU

ARMENIAN separatist­s in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh said yesterday that 28 more of its fighters have been killed in a flare-up of a territoria­l dispute, bringing the total death toll to 59 as the fighting entered a second day.

World leaders have urged a halt to the fighting between Azerbaijan and the Armenian rebels after clashes erupted on Sunday, raising the spectre of an all-out conflict that could draw in regional powers Russia and Turkey.

Ex-Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked since the 1990s in a territoria­l dispute over the Armenia-backed secessioni­st enclave, with deadly fighting flaring up this year and in 2016.

T h e D e f e n c e Mi n i s t r y i n Karabakh announced a total military death toll of 32 yesterday.

Seven civilian fatalities were reported earlier, including an Azerbaijan­i family of five and one woman and a child on the Armenian side.

The Armenian Defence Ministry said heavy fighting continued overnight and yesterday along the frontline, and claimed that it had won back positions taken on Sunday by Azerbaijan­i forces.

But Baku claimed further advances. Azerbaijan­i forces “are striking enemy positions using rocket-artillery and aviation... and have taken several strategic positions around the village of Talysh,” the Azerbaijan­i Defence Ministry said.

Armenian military officials said Azerbaijan­i forces were continuing to attack rebel positions using heavy artillery, while Azerbaijan’s Defence Ministry accused separatist forces of shelling civilian targets in the town of Terter.

Baku claimed to have killed 550 separatist troops, a report denied by Armenia. The clashes erupted on Sunday with both sides accusing each other of initiating hostilitie­s.

Fighting between Muslim Azerbaijan and majority-Christian Armenia threatened to embroil regional players Russia, which is in a military alliance with Yerevan, and Turkey, which backs Baku.

Armenia accused Turkey of meddling in the conflict and sending mercenarie­s to the battlefiel­d.

France, Germany, Italy, the Unit

ed States, the European Union and Russia have urged a ceasefire.

Armenia and Karabakh declared martial law and military mobilisati­on on Sunday, while Azerbaijan imposed military rule and a curfew in large cities.

Ethnic Armenian separatist­s seized the Nagorny Karabakh region from Baku in a 1990s war that claimed 30,000 lives.

Talks to resolve one of the worst conflicts to emerge from the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union have been largely stalled since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.

France, Russia and the US have mediated peace efforts as the “Minsk Group”, but the last push for peace collapsed in 2010.

 ?? EPA PIC ?? A screengrab taken from a handout video released by Armenian separatist­s showing tanks allegedly destroyed in shelling, artillery and air attacks along the front at NagornoKar­abakh Republic, on the border of Armenia and Azerbaijan on Sunday.
EPA PIC A screengrab taken from a handout video released by Armenian separatist­s showing tanks allegedly destroyed in shelling, artillery and air attacks along the front at NagornoKar­abakh Republic, on the border of Armenia and Azerbaijan on Sunday.

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