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Armenian Soldier Killed In Fresh Skirmish On Azeri Border

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  • Armenian Soldier Killed In Fresh Skirmish On Azeri Border

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 29 2006


    Armenian Soldier Killed In Fresh Skirmish On Azeri Border


    By Emil Danielyan

    Armenia's Defense Ministry reported on Monday that one of its
    soldiers has been fatally shot in what it described as a truce
    violation by Azerbaijani forces in the tensest section of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

    The ministry said in a statement that Sergeant-Major Levon Adamian,
    20, was wounded in the chest and died as he was rushed to hospital
    late on Saturday. It said the incident occurred near the northern
    Armenian town of Noyemberian. No other details were reported.

    Adamian is at least the second Armenian soldier killed in the area
    bordering Georgia since February. Skirmishes between Armenian and
    Azerbaijani troops deployed there appear to have become more frequent
    in recent months, with each side accusing the other of breaching the
    ceasefire. The Azerbaijani military did not report any fighting in
    the westernmost section of the heavily militarized frontier in recent
    days, though.

    According to the Azerbaijani news agency APA, an Azerbaijani soldier
    was wounded and hospitalized on Saturday about 300 kilometers east of
    the area, along the main Armenian-Azerbaijani line of contact around
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The information was not immediately confirmed by
    the Defense Ministry in Baku. The ministry said earlier that a
    19-year-old Azerbaijani army conscript, Egdar Hajigayibov, was shot
    and killed by Armenian forces near a village just north of Karabakh
    on May 17.

    The latest upsurge in Armenian-Azerbaijani shootouts followed the
    collapse of long-awaited talks between Presidents Ilham Aliev and
    Robert Kocharian near Paris last February. The two leaders are
    scheduled to meet again in Bucharest early next week amid fresh hopes
    for a breakthrough in the Karabakh peace process.

    High-ranking diplomats from France, Russia and the United States
    sounded cautiously optimistic about the outcome of the summit as they
    wrapped up a two-day visit to Baku and Yerevan last Thursday. In a
    joint statement, they said the conflicting parties are now `at the
    point where a mutually beneficial agreement is achievable.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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