20/11/2014 12:53
OSCE deeply concerned over lack of access to helicopter crash site
The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group issued a statement on November 19 expressing their deep concern that there has been no access to the crash site of the military helicopter downed by Azerbaijan on November 12. The statement says:
“The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group (Ambassadors Igor Popov of the Russian Federation, James Warlick of the United States of America, and Pierre Andrieu of France) remain deeply concerned that there has been no humanitarian access to the crash site of the military helicopter downed by Azerbaijani forces on November 12. The wreckage of the helicopter lies in a heavily mined area of neutral territory on the Line of Contact.
We call on the sides to cease firing in the vicinity of the crash site and facilitate the demining of the area surrounding the site. In the spirit of the Astrakhan statement of October 2010 between the Presidents of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia, the Co-Chairs urge Azerbaijan to permit the recovery of the bodies of the victims, and Armenia to cooperate fully with all efforts to resolve this humanitarian situation. We note the presence of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk and his team in the region, and encourage the sides to use his good offices to allow access.
We reaffirm our November 12 statement, reminding the sides of their responsibilities to respect the ceasefire and honor the commitments they made in Sochi, Newport, and Paris to find a peaceful resolution to the conflict”.
As was reported, around 1:45 pm local time on November 12, as a result of a ceasefire violation by Azerbaijani armed forces, a Mi-24 helicopter of the Nagorno Karabakh Air Force was shot down during a training flight in the airspace over the eastern section of Karabakh-Azerbaijan border. The crash site is in close vicinity of the Line of Contact. Following the incident the Azerbaijani side continued gunfire at the crash site.