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BISHKEK (Reuters) – Kyrgyzstan accused Tajikistan of fresh shelling late on Friday despite a ceasefire agreement reached by the two countries’ heads of state as a bloody border conflict forced thousands of people to flee.
Kyrgyz President Sadir Gabarov and his Tajik counterpart Emomali Rahmon agreed to order a ceasefire and troop withdrawal at a meeting in Uzbekistan on Friday, the office of the Kyrgyz president said.
The former Soviet republics, both allies of Russia, earlier accused each other of resuming fighting in a disputed area that left at least three dead and dozens wounded.
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The Kyrgyz border guards said in a statement that the ceasefire will enter into force starting at 16:00 local time (10.00 GMT). The Tajik authorities confirmed that the agreement had been reached.
However, the Kyrgyz side said that two of its villages were bombed again after the agreement’s entry into force.
Moscow called earlier on Friday for a cessation of hostilities.
Kyrgyzstan said that Tajik forces, using tanks, armored personnel carriers, and mortars, entered at least one Kyrgyz village and bombed the airport of the Kyrgyz town of Batkin and nearby areas.
RIA quoted the Red Cross as saying that about 18,500 people had already left the area.
In turn, Tajikistan accused Kyrgyz forces of bombing a settlement outpost and seven villages with “heavy weapons” in the same area, which is famous for the geography of a political and ethnic jigsaw puzzle and became the site of similar hostilities last year, and nearly led to war.
Authorities in the Tajik city of Asfara said one civilian was killed and three wounded. Two Tajik border guards were killed earlier this week.
Kyrgyzstan reported one death and 55 injuries on Friday in the southern Batken province, which borders northern Tajikistan’s Sughd region and includes Tajikistan’s Vorokh region, a major flashpoint in the recent conflicts.
Gabrov and Rakhmon attended the regional security and cooperation summit in Uzbekistan on Friday. Neither of them mentioned the conflict in their speeches at the event, which was attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin and other leaders.
Clashes at poorly demarcated borders are frequent, but usually decline rapidly.
Soviet legacy
Border issues in Central Asia largely stem from the Soviet era when Moscow attempted to divide the region between ethnic groups whose settlements were often located amidst those of other races.
Both countries host Russian military bases.
Timur Umarov, a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace that focuses on Central Asia, said that remote farming villages in the middle of the conflict are not of economic importance, but that both sides have given them exaggerated political importance.
Umarov said the governments of Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan had begun to rely on what he called “nationalist populist rhetoric” that made land swaps to end the conflict impossible.
Alexander Knyazev, another Central Asia analyst, said the two sides had shown no desire to resolve the conflict peacefully, and that mutual territorial claims had provoked hostile attitudes at all levels.
He said only third-party peacekeepers can prevent further conflicts by creating a demilitarized zone in the area.
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(Reporting by Olga Dzyubenko) Additional reporting by Nazarali Bernazarov in Dushanbe; Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Frank Jack Daniel, Raju Gopalakrishnan and William MacLean
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