Two aid convoys for Karabakh could set off 'within hours' if road is unblocked - Azerbaijan

Two aid convoys for Karabakh could set off 'within hours' if road is unblocked - Azerbaijan

World

Two aid convoys for Karabakh could set off 'within hours' if road is unblocked - Azerbaijan

GENEVA (Reuters) - Azerbaijan said on Wednesday that two humanitarian aid convoys for the ethnic Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh enclave could set off "within hours" - one from Armenia, and one from its own territory - if a road from the Azerbaijani side is unblocked.

Internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but run by ethnic Armenian authorities, Karabakh is at the centre of a rancorous stand-off, with Azerbaijan restricting movement along the only road to it from Armenia to thwart what it says is arms smuggling. Yerevan says that has caused acute food shortages.

Baku said last week it would be ready to allow Red Cross aid from Armenia into Karabakh if Red Crescent aid from Azerbaijan was let in at the same time.

Speaking on the sidelines of the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said that Azerbaijan was ready for such humanitarian convoys to be conducted "on a regular basis" and had authorised the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to make such deliveries.

Bayramov said that ethnic Armenians needed to unblock the road between Aghdam and Karabakh, but that it was unclear when that might happen.

"It may be within the next several hours, within the next several days," he said.

Bayramov's comments come a day after a Russian Red Cross truck carrying blankets, toiletries and food parcels crossed from the Azerbaijani side into Karabakh, the first time in 35 years that the breakaway area had allowed such access.