<p>The wife of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Tuesday began combat training as fighting with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region entered a second month.</p>.<p>"A detachment of 13 females, including myself, will begin military training exercises," Anna Hakobyan, 42, wrote on Facebook.</p>.<p>"In a few days we will depart to assist with the protection of our borders.</p>.<p>"Neither our homeland nor our dignity will be surrendered to the enemy," added Hakobyan, a newspaper editor by profession.</p>.<p>It will be Hakobyan's second combat training since August when she and a group of women from Karabakh underwent a seven-day course that featured physical and weapons training.</p>.<p>Armenia and Azerbaijan have for three decades been locked in a conflict over Azerbaijan's Armenian-populated mountainous Karabakh province, which broke away from Baku in the 1990s war that left 30,000 people dead.</p>.<p>On September 27, heavy fighting erupted again over Karabakh, sparking allegations of war crimes and leaving hundreds dead.</p>.<p>The Armenians have suffered a series of reverses on the battlefield and had to retreat from parts of Azerbaijan's territories surrounding Karabakh which they had controlled since 1994.</p>.<p>Pashinyan has said the situation on the front is "very serious" and called on Armenians to take up arms.</p>.<p>His 20-year-old son Ashot signed up as a volunteer this month.</p>
<p>The wife of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Tuesday began combat training as fighting with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region entered a second month.</p>.<p>"A detachment of 13 females, including myself, will begin military training exercises," Anna Hakobyan, 42, wrote on Facebook.</p>.<p>"In a few days we will depart to assist with the protection of our borders.</p>.<p>"Neither our homeland nor our dignity will be surrendered to the enemy," added Hakobyan, a newspaper editor by profession.</p>.<p>It will be Hakobyan's second combat training since August when she and a group of women from Karabakh underwent a seven-day course that featured physical and weapons training.</p>.<p>Armenia and Azerbaijan have for three decades been locked in a conflict over Azerbaijan's Armenian-populated mountainous Karabakh province, which broke away from Baku in the 1990s war that left 30,000 people dead.</p>.<p>On September 27, heavy fighting erupted again over Karabakh, sparking allegations of war crimes and leaving hundreds dead.</p>.<p>The Armenians have suffered a series of reverses on the battlefield and had to retreat from parts of Azerbaijan's territories surrounding Karabakh which they had controlled since 1994.</p>.<p>Pashinyan has said the situation on the front is "very serious" and called on Armenians to take up arms.</p>.<p>His 20-year-old son Ashot signed up as a volunteer this month.</p>