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Shooting Interrupts OSCE Karabakh Monitoring

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  • Shooting Interrupts OSCE Karabakh Monitoring

    SHOOTING INTERRUPTS OSCE KARABAKH MONITORING

    EurasiaNet.org
    Oct 22 2013

    October 22, 2013 - 3:27am, by Joshua Kucera

    The monitoring mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe had to suspend its activities last week because of an as-yet
    unexplained shooting:

    Following the usual exchange of security guarantees by local commanders
    on both sides of the Line of Contact, members of both OSCE teams
    heard shooting as they approached their observation points. It was
    not possible to determine from where the shots were fired. Safety
    and security concerns prompted the Personal Representative to abandon
    the exercise.

    Naturally, both sides blamed the other. Azerbaijan's APA reported:

    The Armenians violated ceasefire while the contact line was
    being monitored by the Personal Representative of the OSCE
    Chairman-in-Office.

    Defense Ministry Spokesman Eldar Sabiroghlu told APA that today the
    Armenian Army units violated ceasefire..

    And the de facto Nagorno Karabakh Foreign Ministry claimed:

    A planned monitoring of the Line of Contact between the armed forces of
    Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan to be conducted by the OSCE Mission in
    the Hadrut direction, scheduled for October 17, was stopped because
    of the submachine gun shots from the Azerbaijani side towards the
    positions of the NKR Defense Army.

    OSCE press officer Tatyana Baeva tells The Bug Pit that this is the
    first such incident since February 2009. She added that the OSCE
    doesn't have a mandate to investigate who fired the shots, but that
    the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed in 2011 "to try to
    investigate possible incidents with the participation of the sides,
    under the aegis of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs and with the support of
    the Personal Representative," She added: "This agreement has yet to be
    implemented" and that "the Co-Chairs and Personal Representative can
    and do encourage the sides to investigate such incidents thoroughly
    and impartially themselves." Of course, if Armenia and Azerbaijan
    are known for anything it's impartiality on Karabakh. Anyway, given
    the recent heightened tension between the two countries, the line of
    contact probably can use as much monitoring as it can get.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67655

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