Conflict turns into a swamp Azerbaijan and Armenia military clash 1 month October 27 4:53

The battle over Nagorno-Karabakh, the dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the former Soviet Union, takes 27 days and a month from the first military clash.

During this time, the two countries have agreed to a ceasefire three times through the mediation of Russia and the United States, but the battle has not subsided and the conflict has become swamped.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have agreed to a humanitarian ceasefire for the exchange of prisoners of war and the delivery of bodies, twice with Russian mediation and once with US mediation since the first military clash a month ago. However, the fighting did not subside, and the death toll amounted to 1076 in public, including 102 civilians.



In Ganja, Azerbaijan's second largest city, about 100 kilometers north of Nagorno-Karabakh, shells are often dropped and civilians are involved.



A doctor at the hospital told NHK that "the cruelty of attacking sleeping children is barbaric. The Armenian army should fight against the army, not the civilians."



On the other hand, a man in his twenties living in Stepanakert, the central city of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is virtually governed by Armenia, said, "I sleep while listening to the sound of the bombardment and wake up with the sound of the bombardment." It was.



Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed a sense of crisis on the 22nd, saying, "According to our information, the death toll on both sides is close to 5,000," and expressed a willingness to continue working on mediation. It's getting worse and the conflict is bogged down.