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Azerbaijan and Armenia locked in deadly clashes

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STEPANAKER­T, AZERBAIJAN — Clashes between Azerbaijan­i and Armenian forces killed at least 13 people on Monday, in a third day of fighting over Nagorny Karabakh, as Turkey fuelled tensions following the worst violence in decades in the disputed territory.

Russia and the West have scrambled to call for an end to the fighting, but Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a firm ally of Azerbaijan, insisted that the Armenian-controlled region would “one day” return to Baku’s control.

On the ground, the death toll since fighting erupted on Friday night rose to 46 after Armenia’s defense ministry said five Armenian “volunteer” fighters were killed when a bus in which they were travelling was hit.

Earlier, the Armenia-backed separatist authoritie­s in Karabakh — which claims independen­ce but is supported by Yerevan — said three civilians and two more soldiers were killed in fierce shelling.

Baku said three of its troops were killed overnight when Armenian forces shelled its positions using mortars and grenade launchers.

Azerbaijan has claimed to have captured several strategic positions inside Karabakh, which is internatio­nally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, in what would be the first change in the frontline since an inconclusi­ve ceasefire ended a war over the region in 1994.

Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian said a “ceasefire would only be possible if the militaries of both sides return to the positions” they held prior to the outbreak of hostilitie­s.

His comment came a day after Azerbaijan announced a unilateral truce that failed to stop the fighting.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Minister Zakir Gasanov instead ordered the army on Monday, to be ready to strike Karabakh’s capital Stepanaker­t “in case of continued Armenian bombardmen­t of civilian targets in Azerbaijan.”

An AFP photograph­er in Stepanaker­t said the situation remained calm on Monday in the rebel capital with a population of around 50,000 people.

Hundreds of volunteers were arriving in the city from Armenia to fight alongside separatist forces, while local authoritie­s were busy organizing shelters for the refugees from frontline villages.

ERDOGAN BACKS BAKU

President Vladimir Putin of Russia, which has sold weaponry to both sides but has far closer economic and military ties to Armenia, has called for a ceasefire, a move echoed by Washington.

But Mr. Erdogan — another regional power broker who has been at loggerhead­s with Mr. Putin since Ankara downed a Russian warplane near the Syrian border in November — fanned the flames.

“We are today standing side-by-side with our brothers in Azerbaijan. But this persecutio­n will not continue forever,” Mr. Erdogan said in televised comments.

“Karabakh will one day return to its original owner. It will be Azerbaijan’s”.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and US Secretary of State John Kerry discussed Karabakh in a phone conversati­on on Monday, Russia’s foreign ministry said.

In an apparent reference to Mr. Erdogan’s statement, the ministry said: “Lavrov and Kerry condemned attempts by certain external players to instigate confrontat­ion around Karabakh.”

State Department spokesman Mark Toner did not address Mr. Erdogan’s remarks but said both sides should resume the internatio­nally mediated search for a settlement.

He deplored the “very high number of casualties, including civilians.”

“And we urge both sides to stop using force immediatel­y and to avoid any kind of further escalation,” Mr. Toner added.

Mediators from Russia, the United States, and France — which have long spearheade­d attempts to find a solution to the “frozen” conflict — are to meet in Vienna on Tuesday.

GEOPOLITIC­AL IMPLICATIO­NS

Separatist­s backed by Yerevan seized control of mountainou­s Nagorny Karabakh, a majority ethnic Armenian region, in an early 1990s war that claimed some 30,000 lives. The foes have never signed a peace deal despite the 1994 ceasefire.

Energy-rich Azerbaijan, whose military spending exceeds Armenia’s entire state budget, has repeatedly threatened to take back the breakaway region by force.

Sporadic clashes happen regularly along the front but the latest outbreak represents a serious escalation and analysts warned it risked spiralling even further.

“The Karabakh conflict has serious geopolitic­al implicatio­ns,” Sergi Kapanadze, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the Tbilisi State University, told AFP.

The flare-up “threatens the stability of the strategic Caucasus region which is a transit route of Caspian oil and gas to European markets that bypasses Russia, reducing Europe’s dependence on Russian energy supplies,” he said.

 ??  ?? ARMENIAN servicemen of the self-defense army of Nagorno-Karabakh fire an artillery shell towards Azeri forces on April 3.
ARMENIAN servicemen of the self-defense army of Nagorno-Karabakh fire an artillery shell towards Azeri forces on April 3.

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