Armenia Says 4 Killed In Border Flare-up With Azerbaijan
- Armenia and Azerbaijan have accused each other of opening fire on their border, resulting in casualties on both sides.
- The fighting occurred near the village of Nerkin Hand in the Siunik region. Russia has called for restraint and urged both sides to show restraint.
- The conflict has raised concerns about the peace process and the aims of the European Union's mission in Armenia. There are concerns that it may jeopardize efforts to resolve the long-standing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
69 Articles
69 Articles
Four Armenian soldiers were killed by Azerbaijani troops at the militarized border between the two countries, marking the first fatal incident since the two sides began negotiations last year to end the conflict that, with interruptions, has lasted for three decades, Reuters reports.
On Tuesday, shots were fired between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The two blame each other for the incident.
On Tuesday, shots were fired near the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. The two blame each other for the incident.
Clashes Erupt on Armenia–Azerbaijan Border, Putting Fraught Peace Talks at Risk
Cross-border violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan erupted again this week, following several months of relative calm between the longstanding regional foes. On Feb. 13, Armenia’s defense ministry said four of its soldiers were killed—and several others injured—when their border post came under fire by Azerbaijani forces. According to the ministry, the deadly incident occurred near the border village of Nerkin Hand in Armenia’s southern Syunik…
Armenian soldiers killed by Azerbaijani fire in biggest skirmish since exodus
Armenian soldiers killed by Azerbaijani fire in biggest skirmish since exodus Armenia said on Tuesday that four of its soldiers were killed by Azerbaijani fire along the two countries' heavily militarised border, the first fatal incident since they began negotiating a deal to end more than 30 years of intermittent war last year. Fatal exchanges have been common along the closed, roughly 1,000 km (620 mile) frontier since 1988 when Christian Arm…
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