Bangkok Post

Azerbaijan strikes inside Armenia

Karabakh fighting keeps escalating

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Azerbaijan says it destroyed missile launchers inside Armenia that were targeting its cities, an escalation that threatens to further draw regional powers Russia and Turkey into the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkey’s leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged an end to heavy fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenian separatist­s that erupted two weeks ago, in their first telephone call since clashes broke out.

“They stressed the urgent need for joint efforts to end the bloodshed as soon as possible and move to a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem,” the Kremlin said.

Hundreds have been killed in the fighting over the disputed region, and continued clashes have rendered almost meaningles­s a ceasefire agreed in Moscow last week.

Armenia confirmed that military positions inside the country were hit but denied its forces had been firing into Azerbaijan. It warned that it too could start targeting military sites inside its adversary’s territory.

Its foreign ministry later accused Azerbaijan of refusing to implement the ceasefire and — with Turkish support — of trying to “expand” the area of the conflict by attacking Armenia.

Clashes over Nagorno-Karabakh have been largely confined to the region since a fresh outbreak of fighting started last month.

Direct confrontat­ions between Armenia and Azerbaijan risk spiralling into an all-out, multi-front war with devastatin­g consequenc­es.

Moscow has so far refused to be drawn into the conflict — even though Armenia is part of a regional Russialed security group — noting that the organisati­on’s treaty applies to Armenian territory, not Karabakh.

Overwhelmi­ngly populated by ethnic Armenians, Nagorno-Karabakh has been controlled by Armenians since a 1990s war that erupted as the Soviet Union fell.

Azerbaijan has never hidden its desire to win back control and no state has recognised Nagorno-Karabakh’s declaratio­n of independen­ce.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan conceded on Wednesday that separatist fighters had been forced to withdraw from frontline positions in the north and south, describing the situation as “very serious”.

“We must unite to stop the enemy, and achieve Karabakh’s independen­ce,” he said in a televised address to the nation.

The latest fighting, which erupted on September 27, has been the most intense since a 1994 ceasefire, claiming more than 600 lives, including more than 70 civilians, according to a tally based on partial tolls from both sides.

Each side has accused the other of targeting civilian areas with shelling, missile and rocket attacks, and on Wednesday Armenia said Azerbaijan had struck a hospital in Karabakh.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said in statements Wednesday that it had destroyed ballistic missile launchers deployed in Armenia in two attacks overnight.

The OTR-21 Tochka mobile systems were in areas of Armenia bordering the Kalbajar district of Azerbaijan that is under separatist control, it said.

Armenian defence ministry spokeswoma­n Shushan Stepanyan confirmed positions in the area were hit.

But she denied that Armenian forces had ever fired “a single missile, shell or projectile” into Azerbaijan.

Armenia’s military now “reserves the right to target any military installati­ons and combat movements on the territory of Azerbaijan”, she said.

 ?? AFP ?? A man stands next to a house destroyed by shellings in the village of Bakharly during the ongoing fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
AFP A man stands next to a house destroyed by shellings in the village of Bakharly during the ongoing fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
 ?? REUTERS ?? Men mourn at the grave of a fallen soldier, who was killed during the military conflict over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, in Stepanaker­t.
REUTERS Men mourn at the grave of a fallen soldier, who was killed during the military conflict over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, in Stepanaker­t.

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