Karabakh crisis deepens (Updated throughout the day)

Updated at 1500 CEST (1700 Baku/Yerevan)

Azerbaijan says it has taken Jabrail

Azerbaijan has said it has taken back control of the town of Jabrail and surrounding villages. The area is one of six districts of Azerbaijan around the territory of nagorno-Karabakh that have been under Armenian control since the fighting in 1992-94. The area is to the south of Nagorno-Karabakh and has been focus of very heavy fighting in the last few days.

_________________

Updated at 12 noon CEST (1400 Baku/Yerevan)

Harutyunyan says he has ordered the bombing of Ganca

The bombing this morning of Azerbaijan's second largest city has caused dismay, since it can lead to an escalation of an already tense crisis. The de facto president of the self-declared Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Arayik Harutyunyan has now said that he ordered the bombing.

 

Updated at 1040 CEST (1240 Baku/Yerevan) 

The Azerbaijani government says the second largest city of Azerbaijan, Ganca has been hit with cluster munitions. It reports damage in civilian areas and casualties. The Armenian side are making the same accusations as regards the town of Stepanakert in Nagorno-Karabakh, which they say has been under heavy Azerbaijani aerial bombardment.

_____

Updated at 1020 CEST (1220 Baku/Yerevan)

The Armenian Ministry of Defence has denied that missiles have been fired from Armenia into Azerbaijan

________________

Armenian and Azerbaijani sources are now both saying that Armenia has bombed targets in Azerbaijan's second city Ganja.

If confirmed this would constitute a serious escalation of the current fighting that has largely been concentrated in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.

Shortly after 10.00 am local time (0800 CEST) the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence issued a short statement saying that Ganja had been hit from Republic of Armenia territory. Later this claim was repeated by presidential aide, Hikmet Haciev, who said the city had been hit by rockets.

Shortly afterwards, Armenian sources confirmed the report. Armenia's semi-official Armenpress news agency carried a report citing the spokesperson of the president of the self-declared Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) in which he said, "The Ganja military airbase used by the Azeri forces to attack Artsakh's civilians has been completely destroyed". "The Ganja military airport is no more," he said.

The report also quoted the president of NKR, Arayik Harutyunyan saying "Despite numerous warnings, the Azerbaijani terrorist army continues targeting the peaceful population of Stepanakert with Polonez and Smerch systems. From now on the military facilities permanently deployed in Azerbaijan's major cities are legitimate targets of the Defense Army. I am calling on the Azerbaijani population to immediately leave these cities to avoid possible losses." 

Earlier Armenian sources had been saying that the capital of NKR Stepanakert, was under Azerbaijani missile and artillary attack.

These developments constitute a serious escalation of the current crisis. Both sides are claiming civilian casualties, but the bombing of Azerbaijan's second largest city brings the conflict to a different dimension.

source: commonspace.eu with agencies

Related articles

Editor's choice
News
Borrell tells the European Parliament that the situation in Afghanistan was critical, but the EU will remain engaged

Borrell tells the European Parliament that the situation in Afghanistan was critical, but the EU will remain engaged

Borrell underlined that the European Union will make every effort to support the peace process and to remain a committed partner to the Afghan people. "Of course, we will have to take into account the evolving situation, but disengagement is not an option.  We are clear on that: there is no alternative to a negotiated political settlement, through inclusive peace talks.
Editor's choice
News
NATO Chief says war is on Europe's doorstep, and warns against complacency

NATO Chief says war is on Europe's doorstep, and warns against complacency

Russia could attack a Nato country within the next five years, the Secretary General of NATO, Mark Rutte, said in a stark new warning. "Nato's own defences can hold for now," Rutte warned in Berlin, but conflict was "next door" to Europe and he feared "too many are quietly complacent, and too many don't feel the urgency, too many believe that time is on our side. "Russia is already escalating its covert campaign against our societies," Rutte said in a speech in Germany. "We must be prepared for the scale of war our grandparents or great-grandparents endured." Earlier this month, Russia's President Vladimir Putin said his country was not planning to go to war with Europe, but it was ready "right now" if Europe wanted to - or started a war. But similar reassurances were given by Moscow in 2022, just before 200,000 Russian troops crossed the border and invaded Ukraine. Putin has accused European countries of hindering US efforts to bring peace in Ukraine - a reference to the role Ukraine's European allies have recently played in trying to change a US peace plan to end the war, whose initial draft was seen as favouring Russia. But Putin was not sincere, Nato's secretary-general said in the German capital, Berlin. Supporting Ukraine, he added, was a guarantee for European security. "Just imagine if Putin got his way; Ukraine under the boot of Russian occupation, his forces pressing against a longer border with Nato, and the significantly increased risk of an armed attack against us." Russia's economy has been on a war footing for more than three years now - its factories churn out ever more supplies of drones, missiles and artillery shells. According to a recent report by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, Russia has been producing each month around 150 tanks, 550 infantry fighting vehicles, 120 Lancet drones and more than 50 artillery pieces. The UK, and most of its Western allies, are simply not anywhere near this point. Analysts say it would take years for Western Europe's factories to come close to matching Russia's mass-production of weapons. "Allied defence spending and production must rise rapidly, our armed forces must have what they need to keep us safe," the Nato chief said.

Popular

Editor's choice
News
NATO Chief says war is on Europe's doorstep, and warns against complacency

NATO Chief says war is on Europe's doorstep, and warns against complacency

Russia could attack a Nato country within the next five years, the Secretary General of NATO, Mark Rutte, said in a stark new warning. "Nato's own defences can hold for now," Rutte warned in Berlin, but conflict was "next door" to Europe and he feared "too many are quietly complacent, and too many don't feel the urgency, too many believe that time is on our side. "Russia is already escalating its covert campaign against our societies," Rutte said in a speech in Germany. "We must be prepared for the scale of war our grandparents or great-grandparents endured." Earlier this month, Russia's President Vladimir Putin said his country was not planning to go to war with Europe, but it was ready "right now" if Europe wanted to - or started a war. But similar reassurances were given by Moscow in 2022, just before 200,000 Russian troops crossed the border and invaded Ukraine. Putin has accused European countries of hindering US efforts to bring peace in Ukraine - a reference to the role Ukraine's European allies have recently played in trying to change a US peace plan to end the war, whose initial draft was seen as favouring Russia. But Putin was not sincere, Nato's secretary-general said in the German capital, Berlin. Supporting Ukraine, he added, was a guarantee for European security. "Just imagine if Putin got his way; Ukraine under the boot of Russian occupation, his forces pressing against a longer border with Nato, and the significantly increased risk of an armed attack against us." Russia's economy has been on a war footing for more than three years now - its factories churn out ever more supplies of drones, missiles and artillery shells. According to a recent report by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, Russia has been producing each month around 150 tanks, 550 infantry fighting vehicles, 120 Lancet drones and more than 50 artillery pieces. The UK, and most of its Western allies, are simply not anywhere near this point. Analysts say it would take years for Western Europe's factories to come close to matching Russia's mass-production of weapons. "Allied defence spending and production must rise rapidly, our armed forces must have what they need to keep us safe," the Nato chief said.