Conflicts & War

Azerbaijani anti-terror operation in Karabakh kills 2 as military tension escalates

Baku/Tbilisi, Sep 19 (EFE).- Azerbaijan launched “anti-terrorist activities” in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday, sparking allegations from the de-facto government of the disputed enclave that a “large-scale military offensive” was targeting civilians.

Karabakh Ombudsman Guegam Stepanyan alleged that at least two civilians, including a child, died in the military operation. At least 11 people, including eight children, sustained wounds.

The de-facto government of the disputed enclave alleged that the Azerbaijani military had launched a “large-scale military offensive” targeting civilians under the garb of an anti-terrorist operation.

But the Azerbaijani defense ministry said the operation targeted “only legitimate military installations.”

“Local anti-terrorist activities carried out by the armed forces of Azerbaijan in the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan are ongoing,” a defense ministry press statement said.

The offensive follows the deaths of six Azerbaijanis—two civilians and four police officers—in two mine explosions in the Karabakh region. Additionally, there was an attack involving mortars and light weapons in the Agdam region, where Russian peacekeepers are stationed.

Azerbaijan blamed “a sabotage group of illegal Armenian military formations” for the attacks.

Gunfire was reported in Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto capital, Stepanakert (Khankendi in Azerbaijani).

The Karabakh foreign ministry reported that Stepanakert and other cities and towns were under heavy artillery bombardment by Azerbaijani armed forces.

Foreign Minister Sergey Ghazaryan claimed that Baku had been moving troops near the enclave for several weeks and spreading propaganda to prepare the ground for a large-scale aggression.

In the past 24 hours, Azerbaijan has disseminated several “false” pieces of information, including reports of alleged attacks by Armenian groups or shootings at Azerbaijani positions in the region, Ghazaryan said.

The Armenian foreign ministry sought the intervention of the UN Security Council and its international partners to stop the military “aggression” by Azerbaijan “aimed at ethnic cleansing.”

The Armenian defense ministry dismissed Azerbaijani allegations that Yerevan had a military presence in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“As previously stated, the Azerbaijani official reports and mass media continue to disseminate false statements that there are Armenian armed force units, military equipment, and personnel in Nagorno-Karabakh,” the ministry said.

This military operation follows a nine-month blockade of the disputed enclave by Azerbaijani authorities after the closure of the only route connecting the region with Armenia.

Images from Stepanakert on social media showed residents running amid gunshots and the sound of air raid alarms.

According to Armenian Telegram channels, residents of the Karabakh capital and other cities have sought refuge in basements to protect themselves from airstrikes.

Russia said it was “deeply alarmed by the sharp escalation” in the contested region amid fears that the Moscow-brokered truce after the 2020 war might fall apart.

The Russian foreign ministry said peacekeeping forces deployed in the enclave were in permanent contact with Azerbaijanis and Karabakhs for a ceasefire.

In the 2020 war, Baku regained control of a significant portion of the disputed territories it had lost during the initial conflict in the early 1990s in Nagorno-Karabakh.

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