2016 Armenian–Azerbaijani clashes

2016 Armenian–Azerbaijani border clashes
Part of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and Armenian–Azerbaijani border conflict

  Territory claimed by the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic but controlled by Azerbaijan
Date1–5 April 2016 (skirmishes ongoing)[1]
(4 days)
LocationNagorno-Karabakh line of contact
Status Ceasefire[2][3][4]
Territorial
changes
Limited Azerbaijani territorial gains confirmed by NKR officials[5][6]
Belligerents
 Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR)
 Armenia
 Azerbaijan
Commanders and leaders
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Bako Sahakyan (President of NKR)
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Levon Mnatsakanyan (Defense Minister of NKR)
Armenia Serzh Sargsyan (President of Armenia, Commander-in-Chief)
Armenia Seyran Ohanyan (Defense Minister of Armenia)
Armenia Yuri Khatchaturov (Chief of the General Staff of Armenia)
Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev
(President of Azerbaijan, Commander-in-Chief)
Azerbaijan Zakir Hasanov (Defense Minister of Azerbaijan)
Azerbaijan Najmaddin Sadigov (Chief of the General Staff of Azerbaijan)
Units involved
Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army
Armed Forces of Armenia[7]
Azerbaijani Armed Forces
Casualties and losses

Per Armenian sources:

  • 90 troops killed (15 non-combat), 122 wounded[8][9][10][11][12]
  • 4 civilians killed, 6 wounded[13]
  • 14 tanks of (NKR) destroyed[12]

Azerbaijani claim:[14][15]

  • 200 soldiers killed, 500 wounded
  • 12 tanks, 12 armoured vehicles, 15 artillery pieces destroyed

Per Azerbaijani sources:

  • 31–93 soldiers killed, 2 missing, 39 wounded
    [12][16]
  • 6 civilians killed, 26 wounded[17]
  • 1 Mi-24 helicopter and 1 drone lost[12][18]
  • 1 tank destroyed[19]

Armenian claim:[12][20]

  • 300–1,500 soldiers killed, 2,000–2,700 wounded
  • 2 helicopters, 14 drones shot down
  • 26 tanks, 4 IFVs, 1 AEV, 1 MRL destroyed

The 2016 Armenian–Azerbaijani clashes, referred to by some as the Four-Day War (Armenian: Քառօրյա Պատերազմ, tr. Karrorya Paterazm, IPA: [k'arorja paterazm][a]; Azerbaijani: Dördgünlük müharibə),[21][22][23][24][25] occurred along the line of contact, with the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army and Armenian Armed Forces on one side and the Azerbaijani Armed Forces on the other, in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, with Azerbaijani forces seeking to regain control of territory controlled by the Armenia-backed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR). The clashes have been defined as "the worst" since the 1994 ceasefire.[26]

One day after the fighting started, on 2 April, the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense announced a unilateral end to the active clashes from its side, but, according to the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army, the attacks continued. On 5 April, a mutual ceasefire agreement was reached, effective from 12:00 local time. Since then, both sides have accused each other of ceasefire violations. According to official statements of the involved sides, 90 Armenian[8][9][10] and 31 Azerbaijani soldiers were killed during the clashes,[16] and several pieces of military equipment from both sides were destroyed. Various non-official Azerbaijani sources, per research of social networks, put the actual number of Azerbaijani soldiers killed at 93.[16][27] 10 civilians (6 Azeri and 4 Armenian) were killed in the conflict.[8][17]

Background

The Nagorno-Karabakh War ended with a ceasefire agreement between the warring parties that came into effect on May 12, 1994. However, since then Azerbaijan and Armenia have reported over 7,000 breaches of the ceasefire.[28][29] The 2016 clashes are the most serious breach of the 1994 ceasefire to date.[30]

Clashes

Each side blamed the other for the outbreak of clashes around Aghdara, Tartar, Agdam, Khojavend, and Fuzuli.[31] According to Armenian sources, on the night of 1 April and early morning of 2 April, the Azerbaijani side launched large-scale attacks along the contact line between Karabakh and Azerbaijan. On 2 April, a 12-year-old Armenian boy was killed as a result of missile artillery attack from a BM-21 Grad near the border with Martuni.[32] Two other children were wounded as well.[33] According to Azerbaijani sources, on 2 April, Azerbaijani positions and inhabited places near the front line came under fire from Armenian military, armed with mortars and high caliber grenade launchers,[7] that killed and wounded several civilians.[34] According to the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense, during a rapid counter-offensive, the Armenian side's front defense line was broken in multiple places and several strategic heights and inhabited places were retaken (including the strategically important hill of Lalatapa).[31][34] An AFP journalist confirmed that the Lalatapa heights were also under Azerbaijani control.[35] The Azerbaijani side claimed that they had captured some areas, including heights near the village of Talysh, as well as the village of Seysulan.[36] 14,400 people living in villages were affected by clashes, but no internal displacement or immediate humanitarian need was reported.[30]

Armenian Defense Ministry spokesman Artsrun Hovhannisyan sharply accused Azerbaijan of "launching an unprovoked coordinated ground offensive against Armenia’s forces", saying the Azerbaijani military used warplanes, tanks and artillery to try to make inroads into Nagorno-Karabakh.[7] During the first day of fighting, Armenian forces claimed to have destroyed at least three Azerbaijani tanks, two military helicopters (including an Mi-24G and at least one armed Mil Mi-8/17) and two unmanned drones, photographs and videos of which surfaced on the internet.[37] Armenian frontline positions were reinforced, heavy artillery was brought forward, and in the NKR capital Stepanakert reservists were called up.

On 3 April, Armenian military authorities announced that NKR forces had recaptured positions around Talysh,[38] which the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense claimed was untrue.[39] On 6 April, news footage shown on Armenia's First Channel revealed Armenian journalists and NKR troops freely mingling on the streets of Talysh and Madagiz.[40] On 8 April, news footage shown on Azerbaijani TV channel showed Azerbaijan military placing a new sign at heights near Talysh.[41][42][43] Later Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov stated that if shelling of Azerbaijani settlements by Armenian forces did not cease, Azerbaijan could consider launching artillery attacks on Stepanakert.[44] On the same day, the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense announced a unilateral end to hostilities. The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense stated that should Armenian shelling pursue, Azerbaijan will continue its offensive.[45]

On 4 April, Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense reported that an Armenian command and control center had been destroyed and released a video capturing the attack. The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense claimed that along with numerous military personnel, two high-ranking Armenian officers were killed as a result.[46] The three deceased Armenian lieutenant colonel, identified as Roman V. Poghosyan, Alexan G. Arakelyan, and Gregorian K. Onik, along with one unidentified colonel. The same day, the Armenian defense ministry announced that an Azerbaijani drone, identified as an Israeli-made IAI Harop, attacked a bus carrying Armenian volunteers enlisting in military service to the Nagorno-Karabakh town of Martakert by slamming itself against it, killing seven people aboard including the heads of two rural communities within the NKR. It is believed to be the first ever combat use of the drone anywhere.[47][48] An Israeli-made ThunderB surveillance drone was shot down on April 2 according to the NK defense force.[49] Armenian officials later protested Israel's supply of weaponry to Azerbaijan.[50][51]

On 5 April, Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense announced that the mutual ceasefire agreement was breached by Armenian forces which shelled Azerbaijani positions near Tap Qaraqoyunlu with 60, 82 and 120 mm mortars.[52]

According to Azerbaijani claims Armenian Armed Forces directed high caliber artillery fire at a mosque (in Əhmədağalı, one civilian dead),[53] schools (in Seydimli, one schoolboy injured)[54] and residential buildings as well as civilian infrastructure.[55][56] Damage to houses in Azerbaijan by Armenian artillery fire was reported in the Russian press[57] According to Azerbaijani claims on 7 April,[58] Armenian armed forces shelled an ambulance evacuating injured Azerbaijani civilians.[59]

On April 8, artillery fire was exchanged between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces, with the Armenians reporting two soldiers killed.[60] A temporary ceasefire agreement mediated by the International Committee of the Red Cross and field assistants of the OSCE, allowed for both sides to collect dead and missing soldiers.[61][62] On April 14, the Azeri government reported that one of its soldiers had been killed by Armenian forces on the line of contact.[63] On April 15, Nagorno-Karabakh reported one of its soldiers had been killed in action with Azeri forces.[64] A soldier of the Nagorno Karabakh military was reported killed in action with Azeri forces on April 19.[65] Further skirmishes occurred on April 21, killing another Nagorno-Karabakh soldier.[66]

In the course of the clashes, mortar shells fired from the conflict area hit a village in the northwestern Iranian province of East Azerbaijan, but no casualties or damages were reported.[67]

Alleged atrocities by Azerbaijan

According to Armenian officials, residents of Talysh and Madagiz had been evacuated and provided with shelter in other parts of the region.[68] Armenian and international reporters announced that after Talysh was retaken by Armenian troops, an elderly Armenian couple had been found shot in their home and their corpses had been mutilated. According to these reports, Azerbaijani soldiers also killed another elderly woman.[69][70][71][72][73] Photographs of corpses with ears cut off revived memories of the atrocities of the 1988–1994 war observed a Le Monde reporter.[74] According to the Russia's leading human rights lawyer,[75] the head of the International Protection Centre Karinna Moskalenko, complaints about these facts of violence against the civilian population are already prepared to be sent to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).[76] Azerbaijan's Ministry of Defense denied these reports.[77][78]

On 4 April, it was reported that Azerbaijani forces decapitated the body of an Armenian soldier, Karam Sloyan, who had been killed in action,[79][80][81] with videos and pictures of his severed head posted on social networks.[82][83][84][85] According to The Sunday Times, it included "shocking souvenir photos of uniformed Azerbaijani soldiers posing with the severed head".[81] Azerbaijani sources rejected this claim as false.[86] Sloyan's body was buried without its head on April 5, 2016, in his native village of Artashavan. On April 8, through the mediation of the Red Cross, the Azerbaijani side returned Sloyan's head.[87] Sloyan was interred for a second time the following day, to lay his head with his body.[87][88][89]

On 8 April, Artak Beglaryan, a spokesperson for the NKR Prime Minister, posted a photo on his Twitter account showing the beheaded corpse of an Armenian soldier. He called the beheading in a Tweet a "barbaric act & Daesh/ISIS style war crime."[90] According to the public report of the Human Right's defender (ombudsman) of NKR, "the facts of beheading Hayk Toroyan, Kyaram Sloyan, and Hrant Gharibyan by the Azerbaijani troops, as well as the torturing and mutilation of 18 NKR army members constitute grave breaches of customary international law".[91] Azerbaijan's Ministry of Defense denied these reports.[92]

In April 2016 the European Ombudsman Institute (EOI) issued a statement that condemns any violation of human rights regarding civilians and attacks on civilian objects in Nagorno-Karabakh. According to EOI, "civilian citizens of Nagorno-Karabakh were inhumanly treated without any respect and by that offended in their dignity". The report marks, that even ambulances transferring injured persons to hospitals had been targeted. "We are concerned by the information received, that peaceful civilians were killed in the Nagorno-Karabakh settlements through partly cruel and inhuman methods of execution. All these operations constitute gross violations of human rights; they are opposed to European human rights and human values; they significantly endanger the European system for the protection and promotion of human rights".[93]

Transfer of bodies

On 10 April, the State Commission on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic said that of the 18 bodies of Armenian soldiers transferred that same day by Azerbaijan, all showed signs of torture or mutilation. The Commission called these acts "a flagrant manifestation of inhumanity, run counter to the laws and customs of war and are in grave violation of the international humanitarian law", adding that the Karabakh side will ensure that "such behavior of the Azerbaijani side is condemned in strongest terms by the international community and the specialized agencies".[94][95] Azerbaijan's Ministry of Defense denied the accusations and claimed that the transferred bodies of Azerbaijani servicemen had been mutilated by the Armenian side.[96] The NKR State Commission on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons called this claim by Azerbaijan a cynical attempt to mislead the international community, observing that before the start of the exchange procedure, all the bodies of the dead Azerbaijani soldiers had been examined in the presence of representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross, and no traces of abuse or ill-treatment had been discovered or registered.[97]

Aftermath

President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan stated that Armenia would formally recognize the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh "if the military operations continue and acquire a large scale."[98] On April 24, 2016 he publicly acknowledged that the Azerbajani troops took very small pieces of land in the north and south of the contact line, which he claimed had no strategic importance for Armenian forces, who didn’t try to reclaim them to avoid additional losses of life.[99] On 26 April 2016 Sargsyan fired 3 senior Armenian army officials, including the chiefs of the Logistics, the Intelligence and the Communications Departments, a move which was apparently influenced by the public criticism of the high death toll among the Armenian soldiers.[100]

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev initially claimed the clashes were a "great victory" for Azerbaijan.[101]

Armenian Defense Ministry Spokesman Artsrun Hovhannisyan stated that the Azerbaijani attempted to take part of northern Karabakh with a "blitzkrieg", which failed.[6] After a ceasefire was reached NKR Defense Army Colonel Victor Arustamyan said that one military position was left under Azerbaijani control, which was of no strategic significance.[102]

Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense stated that the Azerbaijani armed forces remain in control of strategic heights near the village of Talysh.[103]

On April 25 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia issued a statement: “Today [April 25] at the UN General Assembly and Security Council Azerbaijan has disseminated yet another provocative letter dated April 14, 2016, where, striving to put the blame on Armenia, it unilaterally denounced May 12, 1994 trilateral ceasefire agreement signed between Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia without time limitations". The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia states that Armenia will exert every possible effort and carry out all necessary steps to guarantee the security of Nagorno-Karabakh and its population.[104]

Independent Armenian journalist Tatul Hakobyan, who visited the fighting scene during the clashes, remarked that the death of scores of soldiers of both sides was "senseless" as no real change occurred. He stated: "Azerbaijan did not win and Armenia did not lose."[105]

Russian political scientist Arkady Dubnov noted that Nagorno-Karabakh is not an area of Collective Security Treaty Organization responsibility, and this was proven once again during the “four-day war”.[106]

Dozhd Russian TV-channel reported that the Azerbaijani authorities launched a criminal case against the direction and journalists of the Azerbaijani independent channel "Meydan TV" because of the publication of the list of Azerbaijani soldiers killed during the clashes in Nagorno-Karabakh. Their list consists of 93 names, while the Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan confirms only 31 deaths. According to the "Meydan TV" chief editor Emin Mille, each person on their list really died in the clashes, and the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan can not deny this information.[107]

On 5 May 2016 the Government of Armenia approved the bill on recognition of the independence of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (Artsakh). It was announced, that the recognition of the independence of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is "due to the results of discussions between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, [and] considering further developments, including external factors.”[108]

International reactions

For immediate ceasefire

While not supporting Armenia nor recognizing the independence of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, the vast majority of countries and international bodes called for an immediate ceasefire.

Supranational bodies

OSCE Minsk Group and co-chair countries
Other states
Partially recognized non-UN member states

For resolution by any means

Among major countries and international organisations, only Turkey and Pakistan did not unequivocally condemn violence. Both expressed support for Azerbaijan.

Other reactions

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2016 Armenian–Azerbaijani clashes.

References

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