The constant war-like situations continue to prevail in the countries of Armenia and Azerbaijan. 20 people got admitted in an emergency hospital of Azerbaijan’s second-largest city of Ganja. They faced with injuries from a Sunday rocket attack, chief physician Gafar Ibragimov told a leading daily. In the wee hours of Sunday, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry insisted that an Armenian rocket had hit a residential area in Ganja. The Armenian military has refuted Baku’s statements. The shelling, which reportedly left seven dead and 34 others injured, took place amid the ceasefire, which the two sides to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict had earlier agreed in Moscow.
Trio from Assam rafted 400 Km in Brahmaputra river to create awareness on conserving nature
The physician was stated saying, “We have treated 20 patients, two of them in severe condition. There are five children under three among the patients who are currently receiving psychological assistance and undergoing rehabilitation. The others have been discharged, they are under medical supervision.” The doctor added that a female traumatologist who worked for the hospital had been killed in the shelling.
Researchers discovered worlds fastest UV camera
“This employee had two sons who are now at the frontline [in the Karabakh conflict] ... And she was in a peaceful and quiet city ... unfortunately, we lost her,” the chief physician said. Journalists had an opportunity to see two hospitalized men who had been injured in the attack. One is an emergency worker in his 40s who lives in one of the damaged residential buildings. According to doctors, the man fought in the Nagorno-Karabakh war in the 1990s. The patient slept during the reporters’ visit.