Azerbaijan Says 2,783 Soldiers Killed In Nagorno-Karabakh Fighting

Azerbaijan said Thursday that nearly 2,800 of its
soldiers were killed in recent fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, the first
details it has released of military losses in weeks of clashes with Armenian
forces.
The defence ministry in Baku said in a statement
that "2,783 servicemen of the Azerbaijani armed forces were killed in the
patriotic war," adding that 100 more soldiers were missing.
Yerevan had earlier announced that 2,317 Armenian
troops died during the conflict, which also claimed the lives of at least 93
Azerbaijani and 50 Armenian civilians.
The ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh
broke away from Azerbaijan in a war in the early 1990s that left some 30,000
people dead and displaced many Azerbaijanis that used to live there.
Fresh clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan broke
out in late September, persisting despite efforts by France, Russia and the
United States to broker ceasefires.
Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a Moscow-brokered
peace deal on November 9 after Baku's army overwhelmed separatist forces and
threatened to advance on Karabakh's main city Stepanakert.
Under the agreement, Armenia lost control of seven
districts that it seized around Karabakh during the 1990s war.
Nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers have deployed
between the two sides and along the Lachin corridor, a 60-kilometre (35-mile)
route through the district that connects Stepanakert to Armenia.
Up to 90,000 people -- some 60 percent of the
population -- fled the disputed Karabakh region during the fighting.