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Azerbaijan reports soldier killed by ethnic Armenian forces

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  • Azerbaijan reports soldier killed by ethnic Armenian forces

    Associated Press Worldstream
    January 27, 2005 Thursday 2:24 PM Eastern Time

    Azerbaijan reports soldier killed by ethnic Armenian forces in
    disputed enclave

    by AIDA SULTANOVA; Associated Press Writer

    BAKU, Azerbaijan

    An Azerbaijani soldier was killed on the cease-fire line separating
    government troops from ethnic Armenian forces controlling the
    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave and a swath of surrounding territory in the
    ex-Soviet republic, the Defense Ministry said Thursday.

    The military chief in the disputed enclave, meanwhile, said
    strengthened defenses on the cease-fire line mean that any
    Azerbaijani attempt to take back the territory will be thwarted and
    could prompt "successful counterattacks."

    The latest death on the dividing line and the bellicose warning added
    to tension that persists more than a decade after a 1994 cease-fire
    ended a six-year war over Nagorno-Karabakh that killed 30,000 people
    and drove a million from their homes.

    Azerbaijan's Defense Ministry said ethnic Armenian forces opened fire
    near the village of Shurabad shortly before midnight Wednesday,
    killing an Azerbaijani soldier.

    Gunfire sporadically breaks out between the opposing forces, and the
    dispute has raised fears of renewed war. International efforts have
    failed to produce a settlement between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which
    supports Nagorno-Karabakh's internationally unrecognized government.

    Also Wednesday, Nagorno-Karabakh defense chief Seiran Oganian said
    that "large volume of construction work" done on the front line over
    the past year would enable ethnic Armenian forces to "freely conduct
    trench fighting in the case military action begins, turning aside all
    attempts by the enemy to move forward."

    "We are prepared ... not just to defend ourselves but to conduct
    successful counterstrikes," Oganian said.

    Ethnic Armenian forces also control a large amount of adjacent
    territory, including land that links the enclave with Armenia.
    Disputes over the additional territory have been one of the factors
    preventing Armenia and Azerbaijan from settling the conflict.

    International monitors from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, which has been seeking to foster a settlement
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan for a decade, are due to tour the
    ethnic Armenian-held territory in the coming days.

    Oganian, who spoke at a news conference, said that Nagorno-Karabakh
    authorities "cannot prohibit our citizens to farm in these
    territories."

    Bernard Fassier, the French co-chairman of the OSCE's Minsk Group,
    said at a news conference in Baku on Thursday that the OSCE could not
    resolve the dispute on its own.

    The OSCE "can provide help in the process of dialogue, conducting
    negotiations, creating productive atmosphere, but it cannot resolve
    the conflict for you," Fassier told Azerbaijan's President Ilham
    Aliyev.

    Fassier said OSCE representatives would travel to Nagorno-Karabakh on
    Jan. 29 for a fact-finding mission.



    Associated Press writer Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia,
    contributed to this report.
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