Cease-fire agreed with Tajikistan after border conflict: Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyz soldiers are seen behind a burnt vehicle outside the village of Kok-Tash near the Kyrgyzstan-Tajikistan border in southwestern Kyrgyzstan, about 440 kilometers (275 miles) southwest of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, May 5, 2021. (AP File Photo)


Kyrgyzstan agreed to a cease-fire with its Central Asian neighbor Tajikistan, it said Friday, after a deadly border conflict between the two Russia allies escalated towards war, involving tanks and rocket artillery.

The former Soviet republics earlier accused each other of using heavy weaponry such as tanks and mortars in an escalating border conflict that has left at least three dead and dozens wounded since fighting broke out two days ago.

Kyrgyzstan's border guard service said Tajik forces once again opened fire on several of its outposts early on Friday in a disputed mountainous frontier area with Tajik forces using tanks, armored personnel carriers and mortars.

In turn, Tajikistan accused Kyrgyz forces of shelling an outpost and seven villages with "heavy weaponry" in the same area, which is famous for its jigsaw-puzzle political and ethnic geography and became the site of similar hostilities last year, almost leading to a war.

A civilian was killed and three others injured, authorities in the Tajik city of Isfara said; two Tajik border guards were killed earlier this week. Kyrgyzstan reported 31 wounded overnight in its southern Batken province which borders Tajikistan's northern Sughd region and features a Tajik exclave, Vorukh, a key hot spot in recent conflicts.

Kyrgyz and Tajik foreign ministers have discussed the matter, the Bishkek government said, but the border guard service said two cease-fire agreements have already failed.

The governors of Kyrgyz and Tajik provinces adjacent to the border were set to meet at a border crossing point in another attempt to end the conflict, Kyrgyz border guards said.

Separately, Kyrgyzstan's state security service said its head was in talks with his Tajik counterpart and the intensity of firing was lessening.

Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov and Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon both attended a regional security summit in Uzbekistan on Friday. Neither mentioned the conflict in their speeches at the event.

Clashes over the poorly demarcated border between the two former Soviet republics are frequent but usually de-escalate quickly, although they almost led to an all-out war last year.

Both host Russian military bases and have close ties with Moscow, which urged a cessation of hostilities this week.

The Collective Security Treaty Organization, a Russian-led security bloc of which Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are members, said its leadership was in touch with both governments on Friday.