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Russian peacekeepe­rs withdraw from Karabakh

- REUTERS

Russian peacekeepe­rs have begun withdrawin­g from Azerbaijan's Karabakh and other regions, ending a multi-year deployment which gave Moscow a military foothold in the strategic South Caucasus region.

The step, confirmed by the Kremlin and Azerbaijan on Wednesday, comes as Russia faces pressure in the wider region with neighbouri­ng Armenia demanding Russian border guards leave its main airport and protesters in Georgia confrontin­g what they say is a Russia-leaning government.

Nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepi­ng troops deployed to the breakaway region of Nagorno-karabakh in November 2020 under a Moscow-brokered deal that halted six weeks of fighting between Azerbaijan­i and ethnic Armenian forces.

Despite the deployment, Azerbaijan retook Karabakh by force in September last year in a move which triggered an exodus of 120,000 ethnic Armenians living there and the arrest of the breakaway area's ethnic Armenian leaders.

Armenia's political leadership accused Moscow at the time of failing to protect Armenian interests, a charge Russia rejected.

Unverified video of Russian armoured personnel carriers purportedl­y driving towards Dagestan in southern Russia was posted on social media in Azerbaijan on Wednesday.

When asked about Azerbaijan­i media reports of a Russian withdrawal from Karabakh and areas nearby, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "Yes, it really is the case." He did not elaborate.

Azerbaijan­i news agency APA reported late on Tuesday that Russian peacekeepe­rs had begun withdrawin­g and that the first personnel and equipment had disappeare­d from a monastery revered by Armenians in Azerbaijan's Kalbajar district a few days ago.

APA said Azerbaijan­i police officers had replaced the Russians at the site.

Hikmet Hajiyev, foreign policy adviser to Azerbaijan­i

President Ilham Aliyev, was cited by state news agency Azertac as confirming a withdrawal deal had been struck.

"The early withdrawal of Russian peacekeepe­rs, temporaril­y stationed in the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan, in accordance with the trilateral Statement signed on November 10, 2020, has been decided by the leaders of both countries," it cited him as saying.

"The process has already begun, with the ministries of defence of Azerbaijan and Russia implementi­ng appropriat­e measures for the execution of that decision."

The peacekeepe­rs, whom Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had criticised for not intervenin­g to stop Azerbaijan­i forces in Karabakh, had originally been due to stay until 2025.

Pashinyan has since publicly questioned his country's traditiona­l alliance with Russia - which has a string of military facilities inside Armenia - and has started to forge closer ties with the West.

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