Shelling of cities dashes hopes of ceasefire in South Caucasus
(last modified Sun, 11 Oct 2020 12:07:06 GMT )
Oct 11, 2020 12:07 UTC
  • Shelling of cities dashes hopes of ceasefire in South Caucasus

Armenia and Azerbaijan have accused each other of intense shelling on civilian areas and escalating two weeks of fierce clashes, dashing hopes that a Russian-brokered ceasefire might hold.

Republic of Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry said in a twitter message on Sunday that overnight attacks on a residential area in its second largest city of Ganja killed at least seven people and wounded more than 30, including children.

“New nightly missile attack by #Armenia/n forces on residential area of #Ganja, second largest city of #Azerbaijan. 7 dead 33 wounded, including kids reported,” it tweeted. 

The attack came less than 24 hours after the halt to fighting was supposed to take effect.

Azerbaijan’s General Prosecutor’s Office said Armenian forces also launched a missile attack on Sunday morning against the city of Mingecevir which is totally outside the conflict zone. 

The attack on the city, which hosts the largest thermal power plant in the South Caucasus, was repelled by Azerbaijan air defense forces, said the office. “The missiles were neutralized by the air defense forces of our military.” 

Armenia’s defense ministry dismissed the allegations as “an absolute lie” and accused Baku of continuing to shell populated areas inside Karabakh, including the region’s main city of  Stepanakert.

Situation 'calmer' in Stepanakert 

Still, the leader of the disputed Karabakh region described hostilities as calmer on the second day of the ceasefire, but said that the truce was precarious.

"It seems that since this morning it is calmer, but that can change very quickly," AFP quoted Arayik Harutyunyan as saying in Stepanakert.

The agreement to pause hostilities in order to exchange prisoners and the bodies of people killed after two weeks of fighting was approved by Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in marathon talks in Moscow.

A senior Azerbaijani official said Saturday the truce was only meant to be “temporary,” adding Baku had “no intention to backtrack” on its effort to retake Karabakh.

Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but it is held by ethnic Armenian separatists backed by Armenia since 1992 when they broke from Azerbaijan in a war that killed some 30,000 people.

SS