Armenia announces truce with Azerbaijan after border clashes

Al-Arabiya News
Nov 16 2021

Armenia and Azerbaijan reached on Tuesday a Russia-brokered ceasefire to end violent clashes along their shared border, Yerevan’s defense ministry said.

“Under the mediation of the Russian side, an agreement was reached to cease fire at Armenia’s eastern border from 18:30 (1430 GMT). The situation has relatively stabilized,” the ministry said.

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The ministry added that at least one Armenian soldier died in the clashes, and that the number of wounded was still being determined. It said 12 of its soldiers were captured.

Armenia had asked Moscow to help defend it after the worst fighting since a 44-day war last year between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave that killed at least 6,500 people.

The Azeri defense ministry said it had responded to large-scale “provocations” after Armenian forces shelled Azeri army positions, and that its own operation had been successful.

With Reuters

​Armenia says troops killed, detained in border clash with Azerbaijan

France 24
Nov 16 2021

Armenia says troops killed, detained in border clash with Azerbaijan

Issued on: 16/11/2021 – 18:53


Armenian soldiers pictured near the border with Azerbaijan, in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, in November 2020. © AP file photo
Text by:FRANCE 24Follow

Armenia on Tuesday reported at least one fatality and the loss of military positions in border clashes with Azerbaijani troops, a year after the arch-foes fought a war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The border clashes marked the worst fighting since more than 6,500 people were killed in a 44-day conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave late last year. That conflict ended after Russia brokered a ceasefire deal that saw Armenia cede swathes of territory it had controlled for decades.

Armenia’s defence ministry on Tuesday reported “fatalities and wounded” among its forces “following an attack by Azerbaijani forces.” It said Azeri forces had captured several Armenian troops as well as “two military positions”.

The ministry reported later in the evening that Russia had brokered an end to hostilities, describing the situation as “relatively stabilised”. It said at least one Armenian serviceman was killed in the clashes.

Earlier in the day, the two sides accused each other of initiating fighting along their disputed border, with Azerbaijan’s defence ministry claiming that “Armenian troops attacked Azerbaijani positions in the districts of Kelbajar and Lachin”.

The ministry said Azerbaijani troops “stopped the enemy’s advance, surrounded and detained Armenian servicemen,” adding that two of its soldiers were injured.

Appeals to Moscow

France, home to Europe’s largest Armenian population, expressed its “deep concern” over Tuesday’s clashes, urging both sides to respect the terms of a ceasefire deal signed in November 2020.

The French foreign ministry said in a statement it was particularly alarmed by reports of use of heavy weaponry “which has caused many deaths, especially on the Armenian side”.

Before the announcement of a truce, Armenia had appealed to ally Russia for military support under the Collective Security Treaty Organisation pact, which obliges Moscow to protect it in the event of a foreign invasion. Russia responded by calling on both sides to “de-escalate”.

Since last year’s war, both Armenia and Azerbaijan have reported occasional exchanges of fire, sparking fears of another flare-up in their territorial dispute.

On Sunday, they traded accusations of opening fire at their border near Karabakh. The day before, Nagorno-Karabakh authorities said the only road connecting Armenia to the separatist territory – the Lachin Corridor – was briefly closed due to an incident between the two sides.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, and the ensuing conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Armenia and Azerbaijan agree ceasefire after border clash

Jerusalem Post
Nov 16 2021



An Azeri soldier and police officer talk as they stand guard at the Kalbajar district, Azerbaijan, December 21, 2020
(photo credit: AZIZ KARIMOV/REUTERS)
Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed on Tuesday to a ceasefire at their border, the Armenian defense ministry said, after Russia urged them to step back from confrontation following the deadliest clash since a war last year.
Armenia had asked Moscow to help defend it after the worst fighting since a 44-day war last year between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave that killed at least 6,500 people.
That conflict ended after Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, brokered a peace deal and deployed almost 2,000 peacekeepers to the region. Turkey took the side of Azerbaijan, which regained swathes of land it lost in an earlier conflict.
“In accordance with an agreement mediated by the Russian side, fire ceased on the eastern section of the Armenian-Azeri border, and the situation is relatively stable,” Armenia’s defense ministry said.
Azerbaijan’s defense ministry did not immediately reply to a Reuters’ request for comment.

An Azerbaijan state flag flutters in the wind on an oil platform in the Caspian Sea (credit: DAVID MDZINARISHVILI/REUTERS)

Earlier on Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed the situation on the border by phone, the Kremlin said.
Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu also spoke by phone to the Armenian and Azeri defense ministers by phone, Interfax news agency said.
The Armenian defense ministry said its troops had come under fire from Azerbaijan and that 12 of its soldiers were captured, while two combat positions near the border with Azerbaijan were lost.
Eduard Aghajanian, head of the Armenian parliament’s foreign relations committee said that 15 Armenian soldiers had been killed.
The Azeri defense ministry said it had responded to large-scale “provocations” after Armenian forces shelled Azeri army positions, and that its own operation had been successful.
France’s French foreign ministry had said it was very concerned about the deteriorating situation and called on both countries to respect a ceasefire.

Armenia seeks Russia’s help after border clash with Azerbaijan

Geo TV
Nov 16 2021

Azeri service members take part in a procession marking the anniversary of the end of the 2020 military conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh breakaway region, involving Azerbaijan’s troops against ethnic Armenian forces, in Baku, Azerbaijan, November 8, 2021. REUTERS/Aziz Karimov
  • The clash was at its worst since the last year’s war between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. 
  • Armenian defence ministry said its troops had come under fire from Azeri artillery, small arms and armour, media reported.
  • The Azeri defence ministry says it had launched a military operation to respond to “large-scale provocations” from the Armenian side. 

MOSCOW: Armenia has asked Russia to assist their defence against Azerbaijan following a border clash in which, it said 15 of its soldiers had been killed, 12 captured, and two combat positions had been lost.

The fighting was the worst since a 44-day war last year fought between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave which killed at least 6,500 people and ended in a decisive victory for Azerbaijan.

That conflict ended after Russia brokered a peace deal and deployed almost 2,000 peacekeepers to the region. Turkey took the side of Azerbaijan, which took back swathes of land it had lost in an earlier conflict.

In a series of statements carried by Armenian and Russian news agencies, the Armenian defence ministry said its troops had come under fire from Azeri artillery, small arms and armour.

It said 15 of its soldiers had been killed, 12 captured and that two combat positions near the border with Azerbaijan had been lost.

“Since Azerbaijan has attacked Armenia’s sovereign territory we are asking Russia to defend Armenia’s territorial integrity based on an existing 1987 (mutual defence) agreement between our countries,” the Interfax news agency quoted Armen Grigoryan, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, as saying.

Russia has a military base in Armenia as well as a peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh. There was no immediate response from Russia to the Armenian appeal.

The Azeri defence ministry said it had launched a military operation to respond to what it called large-scale “provocations” from the Armenian side and in a statement blamed Armenia’s military-political leadership.

It said Armenian forces had shelled Azeri army positions with artillery and mortar fire and that its own operation had been successful.

“The Azerbaijan Army has operational and tactical superiority,” it said in the same statement, saying it had targeted Armenian troops and hardware along the border.

“Armenian servicemen are leaving their positions in fear and panic. Military equipment belonging to the opposing side has been destroyed.”

Azerbaijani offensive against Armenia marks worst fighting in a year

The National, UAE
Nov 16 2021

Azerbaijan’s army launched an assault against Armenian territory on Tuesday in the worst fighting between the two countries since the end of last year’s Karabakh war.

Armenia’s defence ministry announced that at 1pm local time, Azerbaijani units “launched another provocation” against the eastern border of the country.

Artillery and armoured vehicles were reportedly used, while the Armenian defence ministry shared a video of a guided missile strike on an Azerbaijani vehicle. Geolocation of the strike placed it several kilometres inside Armenia’s borders.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, meanwhile, said that “all responsibility” for the situation fell on Armenia.

The Armenian defence ministry said that at least 15 Armenian soldiers have been killed or wounded, with another 12 taken prisoner.

It further confirmed that the Armenian side had lost two military positions. Azerbaijan did not provide figures for its loss, though Armenia claimed it had inflicted “heavy losses” on Azerbaijani troops.

Armenia further confirmed that it had officially requested Russian military aid to “defend its sovereign territory” under the provisions of the 1997 bilateral treaty between the two countries.

Some reports from Russian state-linked media claimed that Russia’s 102nd Military Base, located in north-west Armenia, had been placed on combat alert.

The fighting has sparked renewed panic in southern Armenia, at the heart of a dispute dating back to the deal that ended last year’s war on November 10.

The last point of the trilateral agreement between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan stipulates that “all economic and transit connections in the region shall be unblocked”.

The agreement also mentions that Azerbaijan shall have “transport connections” to its enclave of Nakhchivan, which is separated from the mainland by a 30km-wide stretch of Armenian territory.

READ MORE
From the ruins of Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan begins the battle for peace

That stretch is precisely the location of the present fighting, leading to speculation that Azerbaijan intends to create its land link by force.

Over the past year, Baku has repeatedly pushed for the creation of the “Zangezur corridor” — using an alternate name for southern Armenia’s Syunik province — something that Armenia has denied, arguing that the term “corridor” implies Azerbaijani sovereignty over the territory.

That has led to Azerbaijan ramping up pressure in other ways, most recently by closing several crucial Armenian roads that pass into its territory.

Before that, in May, Azerbaijani forces occupied two sections of Armenian territory — one in the north-east of the country and one in the south-east — in a situation that persists to the present day.

Daily shoot-outs also take place on another section of the Armenian border near Nakhchivan, with Azerbaijani soldiers continually firing on the border village of Yeraskh.

The Kremlin has said that the two countries, with Russian guidance, were to hold new talks aimed at signing an agreement on border delimitation on November 9, the anniversary of the end of the war, in Moscow. These talks did not occur for reasons that are unclear.

At the time of writing, local militias throughout southern Armenia were being mobilised amid fears Azerbaijan could advance further.

Armenia Announces Russia-mediated Truce With Azerbaijan

International Business Times
Nov 16 2021

Armenia and Azerbaijan on Tuesday reached a Russia-brokered ceasefire, ending hostilities that erupted earlier in the day along their border, the defence ministry in Yerevan said.

The clashes that Armenia said left one of its soldiers dead and a dozen others captured sparked fears of another flare-up a year after the Caucasus arch-foes fought a war over the disputed mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The six-week conflict, which left more than 6,500 dead, ended a year ago in November in a Russia-brokered deal that saw Armenia cede swathes of territory it had controlled for decades.

“Under the mediation of the Russian side, an agreement was reached to cease fire at Armenia’s eastern border from 18:30 (1430 GMT). The situation has relatively stabilised,” the Armenian defence ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

Since last year’s war, both Armenia and Azerbaijan have reported occasional exchanges of fire, sparking fears of another flare-up Photo: AFP / Karen MINASYAN

The ministry said at least one of its soldier died in the clashes and that Armenia had “lost control of two military positions.”

It also reported that 12 Armenian servicemen were captured by the Azerbaijani military.

The two sides accused each other of initiating fighting along their shared border.

“Armenian troops attacked Azerbaijani positions in the districts of Kelbajar and Lachin,” Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said in a statement, adding that two Azerbaijani troops were wounded.

Last year’s conflict saw Armenia cede swathes of territory to Azerbaijan Photo: AFP / Paz PIZARRO

The ministry said Azerbaijani troops “stopped the enemy’s advance, surrounded and detained Armenian servicemen.”

Armenia’s defence ministry said Azerbaijani forces tried to “break through” the border before being repelled.

In a security council meeting, Pashinyan accused Azerbaijan of “an aggression on Armenia’s sovereign territory.”

“Azerbaijan and the forces that support it are targeting Armenia’s statehood, sovereignty, and independence,” he said, alluding to Turkey, which has backed Baku during the Karabakh war.

Map of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh Photo: AFP / Paz PIZARRO

Armenia appealed to ally Russia for military support under the Collective Security Treaty Organisation pact, which obliges Moscow to protect it in the event of a foreign invasion.

“Given that there was an attack on Armenia’s sovereign territory, we appeal to the Russian Federation to protect Armenia’s territorial integrity,” said Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan.

President Vladimir Putin discussed the situation with Pashinyan by phone — the Kremlin said in a statement — and agreed to “continue contacts” on the matter.

Russia’s Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu held phone conversations with counterparts in Baku and Yerevan and pledged Moscow’s help in easing tensions, the Interfax news agency reported.

Before the ceasefire was announced, the European Union and the United Nations called on both sides to cease hostilities.

European Council President Charles Michel on Twitter called for a “full ceasefire”, while the UN urged Baku and Yerevan to “exercise restraint”.

The French foreign ministry in a statement expressed its “deep concern” and called on all parties to respect the agreements that were reached in November 2020.

Since last year’s war, both Armenia and Azerbaijan have reported occasional exchanges of fire.

On Sunday, they traded accusations of opening fire at their border near Karabakh.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, and the ensuing conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.

Armenian troops killed in Azerbaijan border clash

BBC News, UK
Nov 16 2021
16 November 2021, 14:17 GMT

A number of Armenian soldiers have been killed and captured in a flare-up of violence on the border with Azerbaijan, Armenian officials say.

Armenia said some of its troops had been killed and two combat positions had been lost, while Azerbaijan said two of its soldiers were injured.

Later on Tuesday, both side reportedly agreed to a Russian-brokered ceasefire.

More than 6,000 lives were lost in last year’s war over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Azerbaijani forces, backed by Turkey, managed to recapture large swathes of the region of what is internationally regarded as part of Azerbaijan.

On Tuesday, Armenia asked Russia, a key security ally with long-standing ties to the former Soviet republic, to help defend its territorial sovereignty against Azerbaijan.

Both the Armenian and the Russian defence ministries later said that the Russian-backed truce was agreed.

Azerbaijan has not publicly commented on the issue.

Earlier, Armenia blamed Azerbaijani troops for the latest outbreak of fighting and said 12 soldiers had been captured.

It did not immediately confirm details of casualties – but the head of parliament’s foreign relations committee, Eduard Aghajanyan, said as many as 15 soldiers may have died.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry accused Armenia of “large-scale provocations against Azerbaijan in the Kalbajar and Lachin regions of the state border”

It said Armenia “launched a sudden military operation” to “take more advantageous positions” – but that the attack had failed.

But according to Armenia’s foreign ministry, Azerbaijani forces attacked the eastern border as part of a policy that began in May aimed at infiltrating two Armenian areas – Syunik in the south-east and Gegharkunik in the east.

By Konul Khalilova, Editor, BBC Azerbaijani

A year after they fought a 44-day war, these latest tensions are threatening the peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The single biggest issue is that Azerbaijan wants to have a corridor running through to its exclave Nakhichevan – and ultimately to its ally Turkey. This so-called Zangazur corridor would have to pass through Armenian territory, but Armenia will not accept having a road on its land under Azerbaijan’s control.

Politically it is important for Azerbaijan’s leader, Ilham Aliyev, who pledged earlier this year that he would “force” Armenia to concessions regarding the corridor.

Neither country appears committed to the peace deal and both are increasing their military budgets. However for the moment at least, diplomatic contacts between them have not broken down.

Responding to Tuesday’s border clashes, European Council President Charles Michel urged the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to negotiate a “full ceasefire”.

Mr Michel said he called for an “urgent de-escalation” in discussions with President Aliyev and Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

A Russian-brokered peace deal was reached in November 2020. Some 2,000 Russian peacekeepers were deployed to patrol the area in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.

  • Why did Nagorno-Karabakh spark a conflict?
  • Karabakh war leaves civilians shell-shocked and bitter

During the dying years of the USSR, Armenia was drawn into a bloody conflict with Azerbaijan over the mainly ethnic-Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Armenia is majority Christian while Azerbaijan is majority Muslim. Turkey has close ties to Azerbaijan, while Russia is allied with Armenia.

​Armenia and Azerbaijan agree ceasefire after border clash – Armenia

Reuters
Nov 16 2021

Armenia and Azerbaijan agree ceasefire after border clash – Armenia

Reuters

MOSCOW, Nov 16 (Reuters) – Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed on Tuesday to a ceasefire at their border, the Armenian defence ministry said, after Russia urged them to step back from confrontation following the deadliest clash since a war last year.

Armenia had asked Moscow to help defend it after the worst fighting since a 44-day war last year between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave that killed at least 6,500 people.

That conflict ended after Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, brokered a peace deal and deployed almost 2,000 peacekeepers to the region. Turkey took the side of Azerbaijan, which regained swathes of land it lost in an earlier conflict.

“In accordance with an agreement mediated by the Russian side, fire ceased on the eastern section of the Armenian-Azeri border, and the situation is relatively stable,” Armenia’s defence ministry said.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry did not immediately reply to a Reuters’ request for comment.

Earlier on Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed the situation on the border by phone, the Kremlin said.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu also spoke by phone to the Armenian and Azeri defence ministers by phone, Interfax news agency said.

The Armenian defence ministry said its troops had come under fire from Azerbaijan and that 12 of its soldiers were captured, while two combat positions near the border with Azerbaijan were lost.

Eduard Aghajanian, head of the Armenian parliament’s foreign relations committee said that 15 Armenian soldiers had been killed.

The Azeri defence ministry said it had responded to large-scale “provocations” after Armenian forces shelled Azeri army positions, and that its own operation had been successful.

France’s French foreign ministry had said it was very concerned about the deteriorating situation and called on both countries to respect a ceasefire.

Reporting by Polina Devitt in Moscow and by Nailia Bagirova in Baku, Writing by Andrew Osborn, Editing by Angus MacSwan and Timothy Heritage


Armenia announces ceasefire after Azerbaijan border clashes

Al-Jazeera, Qatar
Nov 16 2021

The Armenian defence ministry says the ceasefire was brokered by Russia, after clashes that sparked fears of a new flare-up.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have reached a ceasefire, mediated by Russia, ending hostilities that erupted earlier in the day along their border, the defence ministry in Yerevan said.

The clashes that Armenia said left one of its soldiers dead and a dozen others captured on Tuesday sparked fears of another flare-up a year after the two sides fought a war over the disputed mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Under the mediation of the Russian side, an agreement was reached to cease fire at Armenia’s eastern border from 18:30 (14:30 GMT). The situation has relatively stabilised,” the Armenian defence ministry said in a statement.

The Azerbaijan government did not immediately confirm the ceasefire.

Earlier, Armenia’s defence ministry reported fatalities and injuries among Armenian troops as a result of the fighting, adding that the number of casualties was being verified and that Yerevan had “lost control of two military positions”.

The ministry later said that 12 Armenian servicemen were captured by the Azerbaijani military.

Last year’s six-week armed conflict for control of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region killed more than 6,500 people and ended in November with a Russian-brokered truce.

Since last year’s war, the countries have reported occasional exchanges of fire along their shared border [File: Armenia’s government press service/AFP]Under the 2020 ceasefire agreement, Armenia ceded swaths of territory it had controlled for decades.

Earlier on Tuesday, the two sides traded accusations of the other side initiating fighting along their shared border.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said: “Armenia’s armed forces committed a large-scale provocation at the state border at 11:00 am (GMT 07:00).

“Armenian troops attacked Azerbaijani positions in the districts of Kelbajar and Lachin,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that two Azerbaijani troops were wounded in the clashes.

Azerbaijani troops “stopped the enemy’s advance, surrounded and detained Armenian servicemen,” it added.

Armenia’s defence ministry said Azerbaijani forces “attempted to break through the Armenia’s state border, at the eastern direction” before being repelled by Armenian troops.

Officials from the United Nations, European Union and Russia had urged the two sides to halt the fighting.

Russia has a military base in Armenia as well as a peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Since last year’s war, the countries have reported occasional exchanges of fire along their shared border, sparking fears of another flare-up in their territorial dispute.

On Sunday, they traded accusations of opening fire at their border near Karabakh.

On Saturday, Nagorno-Karabakh authorities said the only road connecting Armenia to the separatist enclave – the Lachin corridor – was briefly closed due to an incident between the two sides.

Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, and the ensuing conflict killed about 30,000 people.

 

Armenians must be prepared to defend ‘motherland,’ says PM

RT – Russia Today
Nov 16 2021
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Armenians must be prepared to defend their homes if rising tensions on the shared border with Azerbaijan spill into outright conflict, the country’s prime minister has warned, as fresh fighting sparked fears for a ceasefire pact.

Nikol Pashinyan made the call on his compatriots to rally together and protect their “holy homeland” on Tuesday, after clashes broke out on the shared frontier.

According to a message from the Armenian Defense Ministry, “the situation in the eastern direction of the border zone continues to be extremely tense. There are local battles, during which the enemy uses artillery, armored vehicles and various types of small arms.” The Armenian side has said several of its soldiers have been wounded and two combat posts have been lost in the fighting.

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Putin announces that Russian peacekeepers are headed for Nagorno-Karabakh as Azerbaijan & Armenia sign suprise midnight armistice

Both former Soviet republics have pointed the finger at each other for the latest provocations. Yerevan’s Defense Ministry accused Azerbaijan of attacking Armenian positions along the border. Meanwhile, Baku has claimed that it acted in self defense, with its forces swooping in to destroy anti-tank weapons and mortars.

Yerevan’s security council spokesman Armen Grigoryan reached out to Moscow for help amid the skirmishes, saying that “since the attack was on the sovereign territory of Armenia, we ask Russia to protect the territorial integrity of Armenia within the framework of the 1997 treaty.”

This is not the first time Pashinyan has sounded the alarm with accusations that the Azeri army had crossed the state border. In May, the prime minister alleged that Baku’s forces had gone “three and a half kilometers inland” and accused undercover operatives of “trying to surround Lake Selvich,” which stretches across both sides of the frontier between the two nations.

Relations between Baku and Yerevan have hit rock bottom over the past year, with a short and bloody war in the disputed province of Nagorno-Karabakh. Last autumn saw Azerbaijan and Armenia strike a Moscow-brokered deal to end the current conflict over the territory, with Russian President Vladimir Putin confirming the agreement had been reached and that peacekeepers would be deployed to the region.

Nagorno-Karabakh is an enclave recognized as a de jure part of Azerbaijan, but administered by the ethnic Armenian majority. An armistice signed in 1994 froze the conflict over the territory not long after the fall of the USSR, but fighting resumed in a short and brutal campaign in which Azerbaijan took control over swathes of territory.