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Armenia Says Azerbaijan Captured 6 Soldiers at Border


Armenia's acting prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, speaks with a serviceman in the village of Gegharkunik, near the site where six Armenian servicemen have been captured, May 27, 2021. (Armenian government photo)
Armenia's acting prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, speaks with a serviceman in the village of Gegharkunik, near the site where six Armenian servicemen have been captured, May 27, 2021. (Armenian government photo)

Azerbaijan captured Six Armenian soldiers Thursday, the latest in a series of escalating border incidents after last year's war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. The United States called on both sides to resolve the situation "urgently and peacefully."

The clash came at a delicate time for acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who faces snap elections next month.

The Armenian defense ministry said that its forces were carrying out engineering work in a border region when Azerbaijan's army "surrounded and captured six servicemen."

Azerbaijan's military, however, branded the Armenian soldiers as a "reconnaissance and sabotage group."

It said they had "tried to mine supply routes leading to Azerbaijan army positions" and "were surrounded, neutralized and taken prisoner."

"The situation is tense and explosive," Pashinyan said during his visit to the eastern Gegharkunik region, where the soldiers were captured.

Speaking separately at a meeting of his security council, the prime minister suggested that international observers be deployed on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

US, France express concern

The U.S. expressed concern about the escalating tension and called for the release of the six soldiers and for the two sides to return to the negotiating table.

"We call on both sides to urgently and peacefully resolve this incident," State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in a statement. "We also continue to call on Azerbaijan to release immediately all prisoners of war and other detainees, and we remind Azerbaijan of its obligations under international humanitarian law to treat all detainees humanely."

Washington would consider any movements in the nondemarcated part of the border area as "provocative and unnecessary," the statement said.

France urges caution

In France, the foreign ministry similarly urged both sides "to show the utmost restraint and to refrain from any provocation."

This was just the latest in a string of border incidents between the historic rivals stretching back over several months, and it further strained the cease-fire Russia brokered last year.

Last year, the two ex-Soviet countries in the Caucasus region fought for six weeks for control of Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian region in Azerbaijan that separatists had controlled for decades.

Some 6,000 people were killed in the conflict, which ended after Moscow brokered an agreement between Yerevan and Baku that saw Armenia hand large sections of territory it had controlled for decades to Azerbaijan.

Among the recaptured territories was Kelbajar district, which lies across the border from Gegharkunik, the site of the latest incident.

The cease-fire, monitored by 2,000 Russian peacekeepers, has largely held, but tensions persist.

Snap polls

A senior Armenian army representative said there were 1,000 Azerbaijani soldiers on Armenian soil near Gegharkunik.

For now, he said, incidents were being resolved peacefully, but "if a decision is taken to use force, then they will be destroyed."

Azerbaijan said that Armenia had deployed tanks to the area.

Armenia said one of its soldiers was killed earlier this week when shooting broke out with Azerbaijan's forces, an incident Baku denied responsibility for.

Earlier in May, Armenia accused Azerbaijan's military of crossing its southern border to "lay siege" to a lake shared by the two countries.

Elections ahead

And all of this comes in the run-up to snap parliamentary polls in Armenia on June 20, which Pashinyan announced under pressure from opposition protesters.

For months they have staged rallies demanding the prime minister's resignation.

They hold him accountable for what many in Armenia believe was a humiliating defeat at the hands of Azerbaijan's army, and for agreeing to hand over swaths of territory to Azerbaijan.

Pashinyan, 45, says he had no choice but to concede or see his country's forces suffer even bigger losses. Fresh elections are the best way to end the postwar political stalemate, he says.

Earlier this month, Pashinyan said Armenia and Azerbaijan were in Russian-mediated talks on the delimitation and demarcation of their shared borders.

He also said the two governments could discuss territorial swaps.

Russia's role as the broker between the two countries has largely come at the expense of Western powers such as France and the United States. All three are part of a mediating group that had tried but failed for decades to find a lasting solution to the conflict.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan around the collapse of the Soviet Union in a conflict that claimed the lives of 30,000 people and displaced many more.

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