Armenia sent a draft peace treaty to Azerbaijan

Armenia sent a draft peace treaty to Azerbaijan

Armenia completed work on the next stage of the treaty on establishing peace and relations with Azerbaijan and sent proposals to the Azerbaijani side.

 

 Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated this at the government meeting on Thursday, Radio Azatutyun reports.

 

 Pashinyan said that the document was also handed over to the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

 

 "Proposals should be understood as a draft of a complete document with our proposals. We are working on the project with the following logic: to receive a document that we are ready to sign at any time. It is clear, of course, that this document must be acceptable to Azerbaijan. We hope that a certain the progress observed as a result of the three rounds of negotiations will be able to be developed," said the head of the Armenian government.

 

 A few days ago, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan, said in Berlin that Azerbaijan responded to the proposals of the Armenian side regarding the draft peace treaty and Yerevan is currently working on it. "Armenia takes an active part in these negotiations, and we intend to continue our active efforts to build a stable and durable peace in our region," Mirzoyan said.

 

 Today, Pashinyan presented Armenia's vision: the document should contain such a logic of agreements, such an effective system of checks and balances that would make impossible any scenario of disruption of a strong and stable world.

 

 "The signing of the document should not lead to a new war, but already on the basis of this peace treaty. It sounds absurd, but such a scenario could also happen. On the contrary, it should really mean a strong world," Pashinyan said, emphasizing the readiness of the Armenian government and its personal readiness to sign such an agreement as soon as possible.

 

 During the meeting of the European Political Community in Prague on October 6, 2022, Armenia and Azerbaijan confirmed their commitment to the UN Charter and the Alma-Ata Declaration of the CIS of December 21, 1991, in which both states recognized each other's territorial integrity and sovereignty.

 

 Armenia also agreed to facilitate the EU civilian mission on the border with Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijan agreed to cooperate with the mission within its competence for two months.

 

 On October 17, the EU Foreign Affairs Council decided to establish the EU Monitoring Capacity in Armenia (EUMCAP) by deploying EU observers from the EU Monitoring Mission in Georgia (EUMM) to Armenia.



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Armenia completed work on the next stage of the treaty on establishing peace and relations with Azerbaijan and sent proposals to the Azerbaijani side.

 

 Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated this at the government meeting on Thursday, Radio Azatutyun reports.

 

 Pashinyan said that the document was also handed over to the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

 

 "Proposals should be understood as a draft of a complete document with our proposals. We are working on the project with the following logic: to receive a document that we are ready to sign at any time. It is clear, of course, that this document must be acceptable to Azerbaijan. We hope that a certain the progress observed as a result of the three rounds of negotiations will be able to be developed," said the head of the Armenian government.

 

 A few days ago, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan, said in Berlin that Azerbaijan responded to the proposals of the Armenian side regarding the draft peace treaty and Yerevan is currently working on it. "Armenia takes an active part in these negotiations, and we intend to continue our active efforts to build a stable and durable peace in our region," Mirzoyan said.

 

 Today, Pashinyan presented Armenia's vision: the document should contain such a logic of agreements, such an effective system of checks and balances that would make impossible any scenario of disruption of a strong and stable world.

 

 "The signing of the document should not lead to a new war, but already on the basis of this peace treaty. It sounds absurd, but such a scenario could also happen. On the contrary, it should really mean a strong world," Pashinyan said, emphasizing the readiness of the Armenian government and its personal readiness to sign such an agreement as soon as possible.

 

 During the meeting of the European Political Community in Prague on October 6, 2022, Armenia and Azerbaijan confirmed their commitment to the UN Charter and the Alma-Ata Declaration of the CIS of December 21, 1991, in which both states recognized each other's territorial integrity and sovereignty.

 

 Armenia also agreed to facilitate the EU civilian mission on the border with Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijan agreed to cooperate with the mission within its competence for two months.

 

 On October 17, the EU Foreign Affairs Council decided to establish the EU Monitoring Capacity in Armenia (EUMCAP) by deploying EU observers from the EU Monitoring Mission in Georgia (EUMM) to Armenia.