A missile hit a residential area on Saturday (October 17th) and claimed victims in Azerbaijan's second city, Gandja, marking an escalation in the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.

For its part, Stepanakert, capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, has been bombed many times since the resumption of hostilities between separatist forces supported by Yerevan and Azerbaijani soldiers on September 27.

The bombardments have almost emptied it of its inhabitants.

No official report was available.

This surge in violence is undermining international efforts to calm hostilities between Christian Armenians and Muslim Azeris and which involve regional powers like Russia and Turkey.

Pentagon chief Mark Esper and French Armed Forces Minister Florence Parly discussed the need for a ceasefire on Friday.

The United States and France have been mediating countries in the conflict since 1994, alongside Russia, within the framework of the so-called Minsk group.

Destroyed houses

In Gandja, AFP journalists saw houses destroyed by the missile which struck at around 3 a.m. local time (11 p.m. GMT Friday).

Residents in tears fled the scene, some in pajamas and slippers.

"We slept. The children watched TV," said Rubaba Zhafarova, 65, in front of her destroyed house.

"All the houses around have been destroyed. A lot of people are under the rubble. Some are dead, others are injured," she laments.

Dozens of rescuers were looking for survivors in the night, bare hands, in the rubble.

After a few hours of searching, a team left black body bags, including one with a head and an arm, in an ambulance.

AFP journalists subsequently saw three people carried on stretchers but it was not clear whether they were dead or alive.

"My wife was there, my wife was there," shouted a man led to an ambulance by a medic.

According to residents, more than 20 people lived in the affected area.

A resident said he saw a child, two women and four men removed from the rubble.

"A woman lost her legs. Someone else lost an arm," said Elmir Shirinzaday, 26.

Hikmat Hajiyev, an adviser to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, said in a tweet that "according to initial information more than 20 houses have been destroyed".

An Azeri official said a second missile simultaneously struck an industrial area in Gandja, but gave no further details.

City of more than 300,000 inhabitants, Gandja had already been struck Sunday by a missile which had killed ten people.

Explosion in Mingecevir

AFP journalists in the nearby town of Mingecevir, an hour's drive north of Gandja, said they heard a loud explosion that rocked the building they were in at around the same time.

Mingecevir is protected by an anti-missile system because it houses a strategic dike.

It was not clear whether any missiles had been destroyed in flight or whether they had hit the city.

The Azerbaijani defense ministry only said that Mingecevir was the subject of an "attack" without providing further details.

Since the conclusion of a "humanitarian" truce signed on October 10 in Moscow, supposed to allow the bodies of dead soldiers and prisoners to be exchanged, the situation had remained calm in Stepanakert until Thursday and further bombardments.

Elsewhere on the front, fighting continued, with Azerbaijan and Armenia accusing each other of violating the ceasefire and targeting civilian areas.

Azerbaijani soldiers advanced north and south of the front line, taking up positions in Karabakh and two districts that had been under Armenian control since the end of a previous war in 1994.

With AFP

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