Karabakh Armenians agree to ceasefire after Azerbaijan military operation
Karabakh Armenians agree to ceasefire after Azerbaijan military operation/node/2377036/world
Karabakh Armenians agree to ceasefire after Azerbaijan military operation
Explosion flame rises over an area which Azerbaijan says hosts Armenian forces' positions in the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan. (AP)
Karabakh Armenians agree to ceasefire after Azerbaijan military operation
Nagorno-Karabakh agrees to cease-fire with Baku’s forces
Proposal came from Russia, say Armenians in Karabakh
Updated 20 September 2023
Reuters
YEREVAN: Ethnic Armenians in Azerbaijan’s breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh agreed to a Russian proposal for a cease-fire on Wednesday, 24 hours after Azerbaijan began an offensive to take control of the enclave that killed dozens and injured hundreds.
Separatist Armenian forces in Karabakh said Azerbaijan had broken through their lines and seized a number of heights and strategic road junctions while the world had stood by, doing nothing.
The self-styled “Republic of Artsakh” said that in such circumstances, it had no choice but to cease hostilities from 1 p.m. local time on Wednesday.
“The authorities of the Republic of Artsakh accept the proposal of the command of the Russian peacekeeping contingent to cease fire,” it said.
“With the mediation of the command of the Russian peacekeeping contingent stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh, an agreement was reached on the complete cessation of hostilities from 13:00 on September 20, 2023.”
Azerbaijan confirmed that a cease-fire agreement had been reached. It said Russian peacekeepers relayed the Karabakh Armenian appeal for a cease-fire to Azerbaijan. It did not immediately set out the conditions.
Azerbaijan began its operation against Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday after some of its troops were killed in what Baku said were attacks from the mountainous region, which Azerbaijan had blockaded for nine months.
Baku had demanded that the separatist political authorities in Karabakh, which is recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan, also disband before any talks are held about the future of the region, which Azerbaijan wants to fully integrate.
Nagorno-Karabakh is recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan.
LILONGWE: A catastrophic collapse of health care services in Malawi a year after US funding cuts is undoing a decade of progress against HIV/AIDS, providers warn, leaving some of the most vulnerable feeling like “living dead.” In the impoverished southern Africa country, the US government’s decision to slash foreign aid in January 2025 has led to significant cuts in HIV treatments, a spike in pregnancies and a return to discrimination. Chisomo Nkwanga, an HIV-positive man who lives in the northern town of Mzuzu, told AFP that the end of US-funded specialized care was like a death sentence. After his normal provider of life-saving antiretroviral therapy (ART) vanished due to budget cuts, he turned to a public hospital. “The health care worker shouted at me in front of others,” Nkwanga recalled. “They said, ‘You gay, you are now starting to patronize our hospitals because the whites who supported your evil behavior have stopped?’“ “I gave up,” he said, trembling. “I am a living dead.” More than one million of aid-dependent Malawi’s roughly 22 million people live with HIV and the United States previously provided 60 percent of its HIV treatment budget. Globally, researchers estimate that hundreds of thousands of preventable deaths have been caused by the Trump administration’s dismantling of US foreign aid, which has upended humanitarian efforts to fight HIV, malaria and tuberculosis in some of the world’s poorest regions.
- Lay offs, panic -
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- Progress undone -
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