Cyprus Mail
AsiaRussiaWorld

Azerbaijan’s Aliyev tells Putin Armenia situation ‘stabilised’

file photo: an ethnic armenian soldier looks through binoculars as he stands at fighting positions near divided taghavard village in nagorno karabakh region
An ethnic Armenian soldier looks through binoculars as he stands at fighting positions near the village of Taghavard in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday that a border conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia this week had “stabilised”, and a ceasefire had been in place for the last two days.

Speaking to Putin on the sidelines of a Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Uzbekistan, Aliyev said:

“Border conflicts happen. Unfortunately, they have been associated with numerous casualties on both sides, but the main thing is that we have managed to stabilise the situation and shift it to a peaceful course.”

Putin said it was “good” that the conflict had de-escalated, but that the situation was still tense.

More than 200 service personnel were killed the clashes, according to new figures from both countries on Friday. 

Armenia and Azerbaijan blame each other for the fighting, their deadliest confrontation since thousands were killed in a six-week war over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020.

Follow the Cyprus Mail on Google News

Related Posts

Biden administration takes step to make marijuana use a less serious crime

Reuters News Service

Christodoulides and Sunak talk amid migration parallels

Tom Cleaver

Judge fines Trump $9,000 for contempt, threatens jail

Reuters News Service

Israel awaits Hamas response on proposed halt to fighting

Reuters News Service

Smiling King Charles visits cancer centre on return to public duties

Reuters News Service

Scottish government faces no-confidence vote

Reuters News Service