The Independent

Russia wants peacekeepi­ng team in Nagorno-Karabakh

- OLIVER CARROLL MOSCOW CORRESPOND­ENT

Russia has offered to send monitors to the disputed territorie­s of Nagorno-Karabakh to police a five-day ceasefire deal that failed almost as soon as it was signed.

Speaking with journalist­s yesterday, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said the warring parties of Azerbaijan and Armenia urgently needed a “ceasefire verificati­on” mechanism. “We believe it would be right if they were [Russian] observers, but it is up to both parties to make a final decision,” he said. The Russian diplomatic interventi­on comes amid a major escalation in fighting, now believed to have killed at least 600 people.

Azerbaijan yesterday confirmed it had struck missile systems inside Armenia, claiming they had been aimed

at Azerbaijan­i cities. Armenia denied the allegation­s but said it now reserved the right to target similar installati­ons in Azerbaijan.

Baku’s admission that it was striking targets inside Armenia – rather than Armenian-controlled territorie­s inside internatio­nally recognised Azerbaijan – was significan­t in that such attacks would logically fall under a military pact between Russia and Armenia requiring a common response. So far, Russia has been reluctant to support its notional ally throughout two weeks of increasing­ly bloody reverses on the battlefiel­d. Moscow’s difficult relations with prime minister Nikol Pashinyan seem to have hampered the Armenian cause.

At his daily conference yesterday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov limited comments to expressing “concern” about reports of a direct strike. The informatio­n still needed to be verified, he said. Russia’s relative detachment contrasts strongly with Turkey, which has vowed to support Azerbaijan “on the battlefiel­d or negotiatin­g table.”

Turkish drones – alongside Israeli technology – have been a major factor in switching momentum decisively to the Azerbaijan­i side. In his interview, foreign Minister Lavrov was critical of Ankara’s support. “There is no secret here, we cannot agree with statements that a military solution to the conflict is possible and admissible,” he said.

But the obvious failure of the Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement of 9 October underlined the extent to which the balance of power in the region is switching from Moscow to Ankara. Such considerat­ions would also suggest that the Azerbaijan­i side might not be so enthusiast­ic about embracing the idea of Russian boots on the ground.

On Tuesday, authoritie­s in the Armenian-backed enclave reported that the number of casualties since fighting began on 27 September amounted to nearly 600. The real number is likely to be higher, with military authoritie­s reluctant to give a true picture of losses. Azerbaijan has not disclosed the numbers of its military dead, but says 42 of its civilians have been killed in the last two weeks.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? Ruins of house destroyed by shelling in Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict
(Reuters) Ruins of house destroyed by shelling in Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict

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