Latest News

Azerbaijan's leader wants Russia to acknowledge that it accidentally shot down a passenger plane, killing 38

Ilham Aliyev said on Saturday that he wants Russia to publicly admit it accidentally shot down a passenger plane from Azerbaijan in December of last year. The 38 people aboard were killed. He also wants Russia to punish the responsible parties.

At the time, President Vladimir Putin apologized to Aliyev over what the Kremlin referred to as a "tragic event" in Russia where an Azerbaijan Airlines aircraft crashed after Russian air defenses opened fire on Ukrainian drones.

He did not say that Russia shot down the plane.

Aliyev made it clear at a press conference held in Khankendi, during an event titled The Global Media Forum that he expected more from Moscow, whom he blamed for inaction after the downing the airliner.

"We can prove that we know what exactly happened." "We are also confident that Russian officials know what happened," Aliyev added.

The real question is, "Why didn't they act like any neighbour would?"

Azerbaijan expects the incident to have been formally acknowledged and that those responsible will be held accountable. Compensation should be paid to the families of victims and injured and Moscow should reimburse the cost for the destroyed aircraft.

He said that "these are normal expectations within the frameworks of international law and good neighbourly relations."

After diverting from southern Russia where Ukrainian drones had been reported attacking several cities, flight J2-8243 crashed near Aktau, Kazakhstan. The flight crashed near Aktau in Kazakhstan after diverting from southern Russia, where Ukrainian drones were reported to be attacking several cities.

The ties between Moscow and Baku have deteriorated significantly in recent months, after Russian police arrested a group ethnic Azerbaijanis who lived in Russia and accused of them of historical crimes.

Aliyev, speaking at the same conference, said that he wanted to open a transit route between Azerbaijan's exclave Nakhchivan and Armenia.

Aliyev stated: "We're talking about an unhindered state access between Azerbaijan and Azerbaijan. We take this literally - we're talking about connecting parts of a country.

He stated that, when and if it is established, Azerbaijani passengers on trains should not be in danger of being attacked by Armenians who he claimed threw stones at these trains during the Soviet period. He also called for "reliable, verifiable and transparent" security assurances.

Aliyev stated that the demand was "absolutely legal and fair".

On July 16, Nikol Pashinyan, the Armenian prime minister, said that the U.S. offered to manage a potential transport corridor.

Baku wants to secure the potential corridor that would run approximately 32 km (20 miles), through Armenia's southern Syunik Province, connecting Azerbaijan's majority to Nakhchivan (an Azerbaijani enclave bordering Baku's Turkish ally).

The transit link is just one of many obstacles to a deal for peace between Azerbaijan, a neighbour in the South Caucasus who has fought wars with Armenia since the 1980s.

In March, the countries announced that they had completed a draft of a peace agreement. However, it is unclear when this will be signed. (Reporting and editing by Andrew Osborn.)

(source: Reuters)