The Guardian (USA)

Azerbaijan and Armenia accuse each other of shelling cities

- Michael Safi and agencies

Armenian and Azerbaijan­i forces have accused each other of shelling cities in a dangerous escalation of the eightday war in the south Caucasus that it is feared could lead to mass civilian casualties.

Separatist forces in Nagorno-Karabakh – an ethnic Armenian enclave that broke away from Azerbaijan in the 1990s – have reported continuous heavy artillery fire on their capital, Stepanaker­t, since Friday. It reported an unspecifie­d number of civilian casualties and said eight soldiers had been injured.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said Armenian forces were shelling three of its towns on Monday, after hitting the country’s second-largest city, Ganja, the day before in what Nagorno-Karabakh’s leader said was an act of retaliatio­n and a “warning” against targeting civilian settlement­s in the breakaway region. Baku said one person had been killed and four injured in the attack on Ganja.

Firefights of varying intensity “continue to rage” elsewhere in the conflict zone, Armenian defence ministry spokeswoma­n Shushan Stepanyan said on Facebook.

Fighting between Azerbaijan­i and Armenian forces – comprising Nagorno

Karabakh fighters and soldiers from the Republic of Armenia – erupted on 27 September after months of growing tensions over the territory, which is criss-crossed by vital energy pipelines and has strategic value to Russia, Turkey and Iran.

The separatist­s’ foreign ministry said on Monday that shelling of Stepanaker­t had resumed at 6.30am (0230

GMT), with four shells hitting the city. Residents had spent the weekend cramming into undergroun­d shelters and many are leaving.

It released video footage of repeated bursts of heavy shelling and debris from seriously damaged blocks of flats, claiming Azerbaijan had used cluster munitions, which are banned by internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said on Monday it had corroborat­ed the use of an Israeli-made cluster munition in residentia­l areas in Stepanaker­t.

Residents told the Russian state RIA Novosti news agency that parts of the city were suffering shortages of electricit­y and gas after the strikes.

The Armenian prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, said that while Nagorno

Karabakh’s army “confidentl­y controls the situation” in some areas where fighting is going on, it is “very difficult” in other areas.

Azerbaijan said Armenian forces were shelling “densely populated civilian areas” in Ganja, Barda, Beylagan and other towns “with missiles and rockets.”

Armenia’s foreign ministry dismissed allegation­s of attacks being launched from Armenia’s territory as a “disinforma­tion campaign” by Azerbaijan.

Nagorno-Karabakh officials have said nearly 200 servicemen on their side have died in the clashes since then. Eighteen civilians have been killed and more than 90 others wounded. Azerbaijan­i authoritie­s have not given details about military casualties, but said 24 civilians were killed and 124 others were wounded.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross has condemned the reports of “indiscrimi­nate shelling and other alleged unlawful attacks using explosive weaponry in cities, towns and other populated areas”.

Civilians huddled in the basement of Stepanaker­t’s stone-walled Holy Mother of God Cathedral on Sunday, seeking refuge as explosions and air

raid warnings sounded.

Azerbaijan said two civilians had been killed in shelling on the southern town of Beylagan, where residents were picking through the rubble of destroyed homes.

Each side accused the other of targeting civilian areas. In a fiery address to the nation on Sunday, the Azerbaijan­i president, Ilham Aliyev, set conditions for a halt to the fighting that would be almost impossible for Armenia to accept.

He said Armenian forces “must leave our territorie­s, not in words but in deeds”, provide a timetable for a full withdrawal, apologise to the Azerbaijan­i people and recognise the territoria­l integrity of Azerbaijan.

Yerevan rejected Aliyev’s demands, while Karabakh’s presidency threatened to “expand subsequent [military] actions to the entire territory of Azerbaijan”.

Russia, the US and France – the cochairs of a mediation group that has failed to find a political resolution to the conflict – have called for an immediate halt to the fighting.

The Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, expressed concern over “the increase of casualties” among civilians in a call with his Armenian counterpar­t on Sunday.

Karabakh’s declaratio­n of independen­ce from Azerbaijan during the collapse of the Soviet Union sparked a war in the early 1990s that killed 30,000 people.

Talks to resolve the conflict have made little progress since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.

The foreign ministry in Iran, which has nearly 470 miles (760km) of border with Azerbaijan and a short border with Armenia, said it is working on a peace plan.

A spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h did not elaborate but said it was talking to all related parties.

“Iran has prepared a plan with a specific framework containing details after consultati­ons with both sides of the dispute, Azerbaijan and Armenia, as well as regional states and neighbours, and will pursue this plan,” he said.

Khatibzade­h also warned both sides against expanding the hostilitie­s into

Iranian territory.

“Any aggression against the borders of the Islamic Republic, even inadverten­tly, is a very serious red line for the Islamic Republic that should not be crossed,” he said.

Since the beginning of the conflict, stray mortar shells have injured a child and damaged some buildings in rural areas in northern Iran, near the border with Azerbaijan.

 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs in Barda, Azerbaijan, tackle a blaze at a residentia­l building damaged by shelling. Photograph: Valery Sharifulin/Tass
Firefighte­rs in Barda, Azerbaijan, tackle a blaze at a residentia­l building damaged by shelling. Photograph: Valery Sharifulin/Tass

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