The
centre, which both countries agreed to set up in November, was
officially opened in the Agdam region of Azerbaijan. It will be
staffed by up to 60 servicemen each from Turkey and from Russia,
the defence ministry said in a statement.
After six weeks of fighting, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a
Russia-brokered ceasefire for the enclave, which is
internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but mainly
populated by ethnic Armenians.
Turkey said on Friday that one Turkish general and 38 personnel
will work at the centre..
The Russian Defence Ministry, quoted by Interfax, said that
"monitoring will be carried out through the use of unmanned
aerial vehicles as well as the evaluation of data received from
other sources".
Turkey backs Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, and has
criticised the co-chairs of the OSCE's so-called Minsk Group for
not resolving the long-running conflict in decades of mediation.
The Minsk Group is led by the United States, France and Russia.
(Reporting by Nailia Bagirova; Writing by Maxim Rodionov;
Editing by Frances Kerry)
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