Armenia says 2,317 soldiers dead in Karabakh conflict

Armenia on Saturday said that more than two thousand
fighters were killed in six weeks of clashes with Azerbaijan over the disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region.
To date, our forensic service has examined the
corpses of 2,317 dead servicemen, including unidentified ones," Armenian
health ministry spokeswoman Alina Nikoghosyan wrote on Facebook.
The updated death toll from the Armenian side pushes
its fatalities up by nearly 1,000 compared to the last confirmed toll among
Armenian fighters.
Nearly two months of fierce clashes between the
ex-Soviet rivals ended this week with a Russian-brokered peace accord that sees
Armenia cede swathes of territory captured by Azerbaijan's forces.
Baku's army has never revealed details of its
military fatalities, but the overall human cost of the fighting is expected to
be much higher than reported.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that
the number of fatalities in the conflict was higher than 4,000 and that some
8,000 people had been left injured.
At least 143
civilians have been confirmed dead in the fighting. Putin said that tens of thousands of people
had been displaced by the heavy clashes that also left "civilian
infrastructure and numerous cultural sites" destroyed.
The peace
deal stipulates that Azerbaijan's forces will retain control over areas seized
in the fighting, including the second-largest town of Shusha, while Armenia
agreed to a timetable to withdraw from large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and
surrounding regions.