Fighting rages around strategic city in Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia says
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[November 09, 2020]
By Nvard Hovhannisyan and Nailia Bagirova
YEREVAN/BAKU (Reuters) - Armenia reported
heavy fighting around a strategic city in Nagorno-Karabakh on Monday, a
day after Azerbaijan said it had captured it in a major breakthrough
after six weeks of bloodshed.
People celebrated in the streets of Azerbaijan's capital, Baku, on
Sunday when President Ilham Aliyev announced his country's forces had
taken Shusha, which sits on a mountain top overlooking
Nagorno-Karabakh's main city, Stepanakert.
Armenia denied the mountain enclave's ethnic Armenian forces had lost
control of the city Armenians call Shushi, but said fighting around it
was heavy.
"The combat in the vicinity of Shushi goes on. The Nagorno-Karabakh army
units are successfully carrying out their mission, depriving the enemy
of the initiative," said Armenian defence ministry spokeswoman Shushan
Stepanyan.
Emboldened by Turkish support, Azerbaijan has since Sept. 27 retaken
much of the land in and around Nagorno-Karabakh that it lost in a war
over the breakaway territory which killed an estimated 30,000 in the
1990s.
Several thousand people are feared killed in the latest flare-up of the
conflict over territory which is internationally recognised as part of
Azerbaijan but populated and controlled by ethnic Armenians.
Three ceasefires have failed in the past six weeks and Azerbaijan's
superior weaponry and battlefield gains have reduced its incentive to
seek a lasting peace deal.
Shusha, or Shushi, is bordered by sheer cliffs and could serve as a
staging post for an Azeri assault on Stepanakert, military and political
analysts said.
Its population was predominantly made up of Azeris before the 1991-94
war, and it is culturally significant to both sides.
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A view shows what is said to be the aftermath of recent shelling in
the city of Stepanakert during a military conflict over the
breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, in this handout photo released
November 6, 2020. Armenian Unified Infocentre/Handout via REUTERS
RUSSIA AND TURKEY LOOK ON
Russia, which held vast influence in the South Caucasus during
Soviet times, has a defence pact with Armenia but also has good
relations with Azerbaijan, a gas and oil-producing state whose
pipelines have not been affected by the fighting.
Military analysts say direct Russian military involvement in the
conflict is unlikely unless Armenia itself is deliberately attacked,
and that Turkey will probably not step up its involvement if Azeri
advances continue.
In the latest fighting, Azerbaijan's defence ministry denied
Armenian reports that its forces were shelling Stepanakert, and
accused Armenian forces of firing at Azeri positions along the two
former Soviet republics' border. Armenia denied this.
Azerbaijan said positions in its Tovuz and Gadabay regions were
under fire, and Armenia reported fighting in various parts of the
combat zone.
(Additional reporting by Margarita Antidze in Tbilisi, Writing by
Timothy Heritage, Editing by Jon Boyle)
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