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A fierce battle is being fought between Azerbaijan and the Armenian army over the Nagorno-Karabakh opposition, and the Armenian forces have already suffered heavy casualties. On Thursday, 40 Armenian fighters were killed. Since September 26, the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities have killed 74 fighters.
Furthermore, the Armenian forces have suffered heavy casualties in recent days due to attacks by Azerbaijani forces in various areas. Meanwhile, members of the 543rd Regiment of the Armenian Army Reserve Unit have refused to go to war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
In addition, relatives and acquaintances called on members of the 5th Destroyer Regiment in Aghdara, north of Hadrut, to lay down their weapons and stand down.
Previously, the 558th Regiment of the Armenian Army fled the battlefield in the face of a series of attacks by the Azerbaijani Army in the Jabril province of Karabakh.
The enemy left several tanks used in the war zone and fled. In the face of intense attacks in various other areas, Armenian forces dumped military vehicles, ammunition, rocket launchers, various types of weapons, ammunition and other military equipment.
Clashes also broke out in the Aghdara, Fuzuli, Jabrail and Gubadli areas since Tuesday night. Armenian forces suffered heavy casualties in these areas. Several of its ammunition and members of the force died.
Armenia and Azerbaijan have maintained new hostilities since September 26 over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
The ceasefire would take effect on October 11. But within minutes of the ceasefire, Armenia and Azerbaijan accused each other of violating the ceasefire.
For the second time since Saturday night (16 October), 13 civilians were killed in an Armenian missile attack in Ganja shortly after the ceasefire. Among them are four women and three children. In addition, 50 people were injured in the attack. After that, a fierce battle began between the two countries.
The Karabakh region is internationally recognized as a territory of Azerbaijan. Yet ethnic Armenians have ruled the region since the 1990s, when more than 30,000 people died in wars with Armenia and Azerbaijan.
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