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Neighbours Armenia, Azerbaijan trade accusations

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  • Neighbours Armenia, Azerbaijan trade accusations

    NEIGHBOURS ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN TRADE ACCUSATIONS

    Agence France Presse -- English
    March 7, 2006 Tuesday 4:36 PM GMT

    Baku

    Azerbaijan accused neighbouring Armenia Tuesday of breaching a
    ceasefire in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and causing
    the death of an Azeri soldier, in the latest round of feuding between
    the rivals.

    Armenia quickly denied the charge and responded with
    counter-accusations that Azeri troops had killed an Armenian soldier
    last week.

    The Azeri defence ministry said Armenian soldiers had opened fire
    early Tuesday. A second soldier was said to be seriously wounded.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, the focus the dispute, is a largely Armenian
    populated enclave on Azeri territory. When the two former Soviet
    republics became independent, they fought a war over the region that
    claimed around 25,000 lives and displaced hundreds of thousands.

    It ended in a tense ceasefire in 1994 with Armenian forces in control
    of most of the enclave and seven surrounding Azerbaijani regions,
    but Karabakh's status remains unresolved.

    The Armenian side quickly denied Tuesday's accusation.

    "The information from Azerbaijan about the death of a soldier does
    not correspond to the facts," a spokesman for the defence force in
    Karabakh told AFP. "We are also tired of Armenia's periodic violations
    of the ceasefire."

    The Armenian defence ministry in Yerevan had previously issued a
    statement saying Azeri forces had opened fire on March 3 in the
    direction of northern Armenia causing head wounds to a 19 year-old
    soldier who had later died in hospital.

    The Armenian ministry claimed Azerbaijan had violated the ceasefire
    on March 4,5,6 and 7.

    Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev said last week talks on Nagorno
    Karabakh enclave were at a dead end and signalled that his country
    should prepare for renewed war with Armenia.

    "The Armenian side is stalling for time and the fact that the
    negotiating process has reached a dead end is the fault of the Armenian
    side," Aliyev said.

    "We are the victimized party and this gives us the right to resolve
    the issue by any means. We must get ready and the population must be
    mobilized," Aliyev said.
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