Latest update : 2016-04-05
Talks to end the worst violence in decades in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh kick off in Vienna on Tuesday after 64 people were killed in three days of fighting.
Sixteen Azeri servicemen were among those killed in the past two days, Azerbaijan's defence ministry said Tuesday.
Tuesday's meeting will gather Russia, the United States and France in
the so-called Minsk Group to spearhead attempts to end a longstanding
but low-key conflict that flared dangerously last Friday.
Analysts say the crisis could set a spark to the Caucasus, a tinderbox region of rival ethnic groups.
Russia and the United States have called for the fighting to end but
Turkey is standing by Azerbaijan, predicting that the disputed territory
its ally lost will "one day" be recovered.
A landlocked mountainous region with an ethnic Armenian majority
lying within Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh has been in dispute since the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Separatists backed by Yerevan announced allegiance to Armenia and
then declared an independent republic, a move that has not been
recognised, including by Armenia.
In the subsequent fighting, around 30,000 lives were lost and
thousands of people from both ethnic groups fled their homes. A
ceasefire brokered by Russia was signed in 1994, but the two foes have
never agreed on a lasting peace.
Sporadic clashes occur along the front line, but the latest bloodshed represents a perilous escalation.
The flare-up "threatens the stability of the strategic Caucasus
region which is a transit route of Caspian oil and gas to European
markets that bypasses Russia, reducing Europe's dependence on Russian
energy supplies", Sergi Kapanadze, a professor of international
relations at Tbilisi State University, told AFP.
Standing 'side-by-side'
Energy-rich Azerbaijan, whose military spending exceeds Armenia's
entire state budget, has repeatedly threatened to take back the
breakaway region by force.
It claims to have captured several strategic positions inside
Karabakh since fighting erupted on Friday in what would be the first
change in the frontline since the end of the war.
Baku announced a unilateral truce
on Sunday but it failed to stop the fighting. On Monday Armenia said a
ceasefire would only be possible if both sides return to their previous
positions.
Azerbaijan's defence minister, Zakir Gasanov, instead ordered the
army to be ready to strike Karabakh's self-declared capital Stepanakert
"in case of continued Armenian bombardment of civilian targets in
Azerbaijan".
Hundreds of ethnic Armenian volunteers have since headed to the city
to fight alongside separatist forces, while local authorities have been
busy organising shelters for the refugees from frontline villages.
The talks in Vienna were to start at 1pm GMT, but Tuesday's session
was scheduled to be brief and with no announcement to the media.
President Vladimir Putin of Russia, which has sold weaponry to both
sides but has far closer economic and military ties to Armenia, has
called for a ceasefire, a move that was echoed by Washington.
But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan – another regional power
broker who has been at loggerheads with Putin since Ankara downed a
Russian warplane near the Syrian border in November – has stood
alongside Azerbaijan.
"We are today standing side by side with our brothers in Azerbaijan.
But this persecution will not continue forever," Erdogan said in
televised comments.
"Karabakh will one day return to its original owner. It will be Azerbaijan's."
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
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