Ganja

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Jews pray for peace in Nagorno-Karabakh

Jews pray for peace in Nagorno-Karabakh

"On October 18th, I found myself in Azerbaijan’s Ganja, a day after the fourth missile attack had struck civilian targets in the city. I witnessed the tragic scenes of destruction and death in a residential district, meeting Jewish families and hearing their accounts first-hand," Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi of Azerbaijan Shneor Segal writes in the article Daring to hope in Nagorno-Karabakh for Jewish News

On verge of great return

On verge of great return

The Armenians will gradually lose more towns and positions. The Armenian counter-attacks are not bringing the expected results, and the shelling of civilian targets in the Azerbaijani city of Ganja is difficult to justify on military grounds

Armenia needs to withdraw for lasting peace in Nagorno-Karabakh

Armenia needs to withdraw for lasting peace in Nagorno-Karabakh

Armenian leaders have tried to label the conflict a “genocide” against Armenia, invoking memories of 1915. But in the case of Nagorno-Karabakh, it is Armenia itself that has carried out ethnic-cleansing, driving over half a million Azerbaijanis from their homes in the occupied territory.

Aftermath of Armenian terrorist attack in Ganja

Aftermath of Armenian terrorist attack in Ganja

Three of those who died as a result of the missile attack on Ganja by the Armenian armed forces on October 17, 2020 are young children, Trend reports. As reported, 13 people, including three children, four women and six men, …

Ganja. "It was a terrible vision, like an earthquake had hit"

Ganja. "It was a terrible vision, like an earthquake had hit"

Journalist Seymur Kazimov gives an Azerbaijani perspective on working near the front lines in the worst violence between Azerbaijan and Armenia in more than a quarter of a century. Radio Liberty provides an edited version of his account.