'Heavy Fighting' Over Karabakh Amid Azerbaijan Offensive: Armenia

Armenian and Azerbaijani forces engaged in intense
fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region after Azerbaijan launched a
large-scale new offensive on Saturday, Armenian officials said.
Baku and Yerevan have for decades been locked in a
simmering conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnically Armenian region of
Azerbaijan which broke away from Baku in a 1990s war that claimed the lives of
some 30,000 people.
Both sides have defied international calls for a
ceasefire and accused the other of starting the new clashes that began last
Sunday and have seen the heaviest fighting since a 1994 ceasefire.
On Saturday, Armenia-backed separatist forces
repelled a "massive attack" by Azerbaijan and launched a
counter-offensive, Armenian defence ministry spokeswoman Shushan Stepanyan
said.
"Heavy fighting is ongoing on other
flanks," she wrote on Facebook.
Karabakh separatist leader Arayik Harutyunyan said a
"final battle" was under way with Azerbaijani troops.
"The nation and motherland are under threat.
Time has come for the entire nation to become a powerful army," he told
journalists before joining troops at the battlefield.
Karabakh army spokesman Suren Sarumyan said
Azerbaijani forces who were using aviation, drones, and tanks met "heroic
resistance" from separatist fighters.
The Azerbaijani defence ministry claimed its forces
had "captured new footholds (in Karabakh) and cleaned up the territory
from enemy troops."
Nearly 200 people have been confirmed killed since
the fighting erupted last Sunday, including more than 30 civilians.
There are fears the fighting could expand into an
all-out, multi-front war involving regional powers Turkey and Russia.