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Mediators Raise Concerns Over Deadly Karabakh Fighting

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  • Mediators Raise Concerns Over Deadly Karabakh Fighting

    MEDIATORS RAISE CONCERNS OVER DEADLY KARABAKH FIGHTING

    Agence France Presse
    November 17, 2008 Monday 3:47 PM GMT

    International mediators raised concerns Monday over fresh fighting
    near Azerbaijan's disputed Nagorny Karabakh region that left at least
    one soldier dead at the weekend.

    "The situation is tense... We are deeply concerned by what happened,"
    US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza told a news
    conference in Yerevan of the Minsk Group, which leads international
    efforts to resolve the dispute.

    Backed by Armenia, ethnic Armenian separatists seized control of
    Nagorny Karabakh in the early 1990s in a war that killed nearly 30,000
    people and forced two million to flee their homes.

    An Azerbaijani soldier was killed overnight Sunday during fighting on
    the region's southeastern border, a spokesman for Karabakh's military
    forces, Senor Asratian, told AFP.

    He said the fighting began when Azerbaijani special forces launched
    an incursion into the region's territory. The Azerbaijanis were pushed
    back and separatist forces suffered no losses, he said.

    In Baku, Azerbaijani Defence Ministry Spokesman Eldar Sabiroglu
    confirmed that one of the country's soldiers had been killed and
    said two soldiers from Karabakh's rebel forces had also died in
    the fighting.

    He denied that Azerbaijani forces had tried to move into the region.

    "The armed incident was a result of the violation by the Armenian
    side of the ceasefire regime. The Azerbaijani soldiers were acting
    only in defence," Sabiroglu said.

    The incident comes after Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and his
    Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev signed a declaration in Moscow
    this month calling for a peaceful resolution to the long-running
    dispute.

    The country's two foreign ministers are to meet for further talks in
    Helsinki on December 4, the Russian representative in the Minsk Group,
    Yury Merzliakov, said at the press conference in Yerevan.

    France, Russia and the United States are co-chairs of the Minsk Group,
    which is seeking to resolve the conflict and is under the auspices
    of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

    A ceasefire was signed between the two former Soviet republics in
    1994 but the dispute remains unresolved after years of negotiations,
    and shootings between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in the region
    are common.
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