Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Armenia accused over killing of civilians in Karabakh

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Armenia accused over killing of civilians in Karabakh

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    March 9 2008


    Armenia accused over killing of civilians in Karabakh

    Azerbaijans defence ministry accused Armenian forces on Sunday of
    opening fire on a residential area near the disputed region of
    Nagorny Karabakh and killing two civilians.


    The defence ministry said that two men, 26-year-old Niyamaddin
    Ismaylov and 38-year-old Etibar Mikayilov, were killed when Armenian
    forces opened fire on the residential area and Azerbaijani positions
    in the frontline Aghdam region. Two other men were wounded in the
    shooting which began Saturday night and continued until early Sunday,
    a defence ministry spokesman said. It followed one of the worst
    breaches of a 1994 ceasefire in the region in years on Tuesday.

    Both sides accused the other of taking advantage of the volatile
    political situation in Armenia to violate the ceasefire. The Armenian
    capital Yerevan is under a state of emergency after eight people were
    killed on March 1 in street battles between riot police and
    opposition supporters protesting the result of a presidential
    election Azerbaijan claimed that four of its soldiers and 12 Armenian
    servicemen were killed in the fighting Tuesday, while Armenia claimed
    it had lost no soldiers and that eight Azerbaijanis died.

    Armenian forces seized control of Nagorny Karabakh and seven
    surrounding regions from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s, in a war that
    claimed an estimated 30,000 lives and forced about a million people
    to flee their homes. The two countries have cut direct economic and
    transport links and failed to negotiate a settlement on the regions
    status.

    Armenian and Azerbaijani forces are spread across a ceasefire line in
    and around Nagorny Karabakh, often facing each other at close range,
    and shootings are common.
Working...
X