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Source: Dubai – Arabia.net
Moscow announced in the early hours of Saturday that the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia had reached an agreement to establish a ceasefire in Karabakh, after talks that lasted 10 hours.
The Russian Foreign Ministry indicated that the two parties agreed that the agreement would enter into force at 12 noon on October 10.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that “Azerbaijan and Armenia will begin, with the mediation of the co-chairs of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, on the basis of the basic principles of substantive negotiation settlement with the objective to reach a peaceful settlement as soon as possible. “
The two sides highlighted the start of the process of exchanging prisoners, other detainees and corpses as soon as the agreement enters into force in Karabakh, with the mediation of the International Committee of the Red Cross.
For his part, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov confirmed that “the two parties to the conflict in Karabakh will agree on the details of the agreement separately.”
Negotiations began on Friday night between Armenia and Azerbaijan regarding the conflict between the two sides over the Nagorno Karabakh region in the Russian capital Moscow, while Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev insisted his country would not do no concessions in the talks with Armenia, and predicted that Armenia would continue to consider Nagorno Karabakh as a party. Of what talks can fail.
The agreement between the two parties came in the context of an appeal by Russian President Vladimir Putin to the parties to the conflict in the disputed Karabakh region between Azerbaijan and Armenia to halt the fighting on humanitarian grounds.
And Russia announced early Friday that Armenia and Azerbaijan had agreed to participate in the negotiations in Moscow aimed at ending the battles in Nagorno Karabakh, after Russian President Vladimir Putin called for them to take place, while a statement issued by the French presidency awaited the announcement of a truce tonight or tomorrow. In Nagorno-Karabakh.
The official balance of the battles since September 27 has reached 300 to 400 dead, including civilians, but these numbers remain partial, as Baku does not announce its military casualties, and both sides confirm that the other has inflicted thousands of deaths. among his soldiers.
The resumption of fighting raises fears abroad about the “internationalization” of the conflict in a region where the interests of Russia, Turkey, Iran and the West overlap, especially since Baku has the support of Turkey while Moscow has a treaty military with Yerevan.
Turkey has been accused of interfering in the conflict by sending teams and forces.
And Putin, who plays the role of arbiter in the region, warned that should the battles spread outside Karabakh to reach Armenia, Moscow would fulfill its “obligations” under its military alliance with Yerevan.
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