Azerbaijan releases data on military casualties from Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, says 2,783 troops died
Azerbaijan has released its first official data on casualties from the conflict over disputed Nagorno-Karabakh, which ended with a Russian-brokered truce in November. The Defense Ministry in Baku said 2,783 troops were killed.
More than 100 servicemen were also registered as missing in action during the fighting with Armenia-backed forces who previously held all of the region, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry announced in a Facebook post on Thursday.
More than 1,240 troops who were injured during the conflict have been undergoing medical treatment, it added. The names and other details about the deceased servicemen will be made public later, with a special commission working to make that happen, the ministry said.
The Armenian Health Ministry announced the country's military losses a few weeks ago. It said that 2,317 Armenian troops were killed, specifying that only the bodies that have "passed a forensic medical examination" were counted. Nagorno-Karabakh authorities had earlier put the death toll at 1,383.
However, during the conflict both Baku and Yerevan claimed that they had delivered much greater losses to the enemy.
Also on rt.com Karabakh truce was about ‘saving lives, not scoring political points’: Russia’s Lavrov addresses ‘wounded pride’ of US & FranceNagorno-Karabakh, which is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but mainly populated by ethnic Armenians, has been a source of major tension in relations between the two South Caucasus neighbors for decades, also provoking a bloody war in the region between 1988 and 1994.
A new major flare-up started in late September, with intense fighting going on for over a month. An end was finally put to the violence on November 9, when Azerbaijan and Armenia signed an armistice under Russian mediation.
Also on rt.com Russian peacekeeper wounded, Azeri serviceman killed in landmine blast as work to uphold Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire continuesAccording to the deal, parts of Nagorno-Karabakh were passed under Azerbaijani control, while Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the region to prevent possible provocation and facilitate the return of refugees.
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