The heads of curve enemies Armenia and Azerbaijan have concurred in a Brussels meeting to “advance conversations” on a truce over Karabakh which was freed by Baku from Yerevan during a conflict in 2020, the European Council’s leader said.
The two chiefs had a “blunt and useful” EU-intervened conversation in Brussels, European Council President Charles Michel said on Sunday.
“The pioneers consented to propel conversations on the future truce administering state relations among Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Michel said in an explanation.
The cycle will start in “the next few weeks”, he said, adding that he had focused on the two chiefs that “it was fundamental that the freedoms and security of the ethnic Armenian populace in Karabakh be tended to”.
There will likewise be a “meeting of the Border Commissions” before long, which will resolve issues of boundary delimitation and “how best to guarantee what is going on”.
The pioneers likewise concurred that transport joins should have been unblocked.
Nikol Pashinyan – – right now confronting strain to leave – – talked about “arrangements for the discussion cycle on standardization of relations between the two nations, helpful issues, as well as the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh struggle”, said an articulation from his office.
Ilham Aliyev’s office said the president “communicated his expectation that the most common way of drafting the nonaggression treaty between the two nations would be sped up”.
Another EU-organized gathering among Aliyev and Pashinyan is set for July or August, Michel said.
Public embarrassment
During the 44-day struggle, Azerbaijan freed a few urban areas and around 300 settlements and towns that had been occupied by Armenia for nearly 30 years.
In January 2021, the heads of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia marked an agreement to foster financial ties and framework to help the whole district. It additionally remembered the foundation of a three sided working gathering for Karabakh.
The agreement was found in Armenia as a public embarrassment and started a long period of government fights, driving Pashinyan to call snap parliamentary surveys which his party, Civil Contract, won last September.