YEREVAN: People attend a protest rally against the country's agreement to end fighting with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region outside the government headquarters yesterday. - AFP

YEREVAN: More than 2,000 demonstrators yesterday protested in the Armenian capital as anger mounted over Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's decision to cede swathes of disputed territory to Azerbaijan under a controversial peace deal. Pashinyan announced a Russian-brokered peace agreement with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh in the early hours of Tuesday, ending weeks of intense fighting that left more than 1,400 dead and displaced tens of thousands.

The peace accord sparked celebrations in Azerbaijan but fury in Armenia, where demonstrators stormed government buildings and demanded Pashinyan's resignation earlier this week. Yesterday, more than 400 Russian peacekeepers deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh where fierce clashes raged for more than six weeks between Armenian separatists and Azerbaijan's forces.

In the Armenian capital Yerevan, police hauled off demonstrators from a gathering of more than two thousand protesters who were shouting anti-Pashinyan slogans and calling the prime minister a "traitor" in front of government headquarters. High-profile opposition figure Gagik Tsarukyan was among those detained, said an AFP correspondent at the scene.

"You will not be able to stop the whole country," a member of the Prosperous Armenia party, Arman Abovyan, shouted through a megaphone to protesters who had rallied despite a ban imposed on public gatherings while martial law was in place. Clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenian separatists broke out in late September. "Azerbaijan was winning militarily and Armenia faced a crushing defeat. But humiliation cannot be a strong basis for sustained peace," the International Crisis Group warned in a report yesterday.

Russian peacekeepers deploy
The deal stipulates that Azerbaijan's forces will retain control over areas seized in the fighting, including the second-largest town of Shusha, while Armenia agreed to a timetable to withdraw from large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh. As part of the accord, a Russian force of 1,960 military personnel and 90 armored personnel carriers are deploying to the region as peacekeepers, for a renewable five-year mission.

The military said yesterday that 414 Russian servicemen as well as helicopters and military vehicles arrived in Armenia, adding that the peacekeeping force was now in control of the crucial Lachin transport artery connecting Armenia to Karabakh. Sergei Rudskoy of the Russian General Staff said the servicemen had previous experience on humanitarian deployments in Syria, where Russian forces deployed in 2015 to support Syrian leader Bashar Al-Assad.

The army was in "constant contact" with military leadership in Azerbaijan and Armenia to prevent further clashes, Rudskoy said, adding that a total of 16 observation points would be installed along the line of contact in Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor. Azerbaijan has been pushing for Ankara's involvement in a settlement and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday that his country would jointly supervise the ceasefire with Russia.

Turkey, a stauch ally of Azerbaijan, voiced strong backing for Baku's military intervention and was widely accused by Western countries, Russia and Armenia of dispatching mercenaries from Syria to bolster Azerbaijan's army. Turkey and Russia signed an agreement establishing a joint center to monitor the ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh yesterday morning and the two countries will work together there, said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The mountainous region declared independence from Azerbaijan nearly 30 years ago but it has not been recognized internationally, even by Armenia. Fighting between Azerbaijan and the separatists persisted despite efforts by France, the United States and Russia to broker three separate ceasefires that collapsed as both sides accused the other of violations. - AFP