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Iran warns ‘terrorists’ near border in Karabakh fighting

By AFP
October 08, 2020

TEHRAN: Iran warned on Wednesday it will not tolerate "terrorists" near its border with Azerbaijan, after France and Russia raised the alarm over the deployment of Syrian militants in the Karabakh conflict.

"It is unacceptable for us that some people want to send terrorists from Syria and other places towards regions near our frontiers," President Hassan Rouhani said, quoted on state television. Iran borders Armenian-held areas of Azerbaijan near Nagorno-Karabakh that have seen fighting.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have for decades been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnically Armenian area which broke away from Baku in a 1990s war that cost about 30,000 lives.

Heavy fighting erupted on September 27 in one of the most combustible frozen conflicts left over from the collapse of the Soviet Union. Turkey has been accused of deploying fighters from Syria to support Azerbaijan in Karabakh.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Ankara had sent Syrian "Jihadists" to the region, accusing Turkey of crossing a "red line". Turkey has not responded publicly. Russia and Armenia have also said that fighters from Syria and Libya are being deployed on the Azeri side in the conflict.

Rouhani, which has good relations with both Yerevan and Baku, reiterated on Wednesday that "occupation is in no case acceptable". "Everyone" must "accept the reality... and respect other countries’ territorial integrity", he said.