Turkish Press: President Ilham Aliyev reelected after winning 92% votes in Azerbaijan’s election

Yeni Safak

Turkey – Feb 8 2024

President Ilham Aliyev reelected after winning 92% votes in Azerbaijan's election

Landslide victory for Aliyev in election which saw recently liberated Karabakh region vote for first time

Incumbent Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev is leading with 92.1% votes, according to the country's Central Election Commission (CEC).

The figure was announced by election commissioner Mazakhir Panakhov after counting 93% of votes from Wednesday's presidential election.

Zahid Oruj, an independent candidate, trailed with 2.19%, followed by Great Creation Party leader Fazil Mustafa with 2% of the vote.

Other candidates scored less than 2% of the vote.

The main feature of the 2024 Azerbaijani presidential election was that for the first time in the history of Azerbaijan they were held throughout the entire territory of the country, including the liberated Karabakh region.

The turnout there has become one of the highest in the country. Two hours after the start of the elections, about 30% of votes were cast in the region, the election commission said.

Foreign and local observers monitored the election, along with a large number of journalists.

Turkish Press: Russia urges Armenia to return to constructive dialogue in CSTO military bloc

Yeni Safak
Turkey – Feb 8 2024

Russia urges Armenia to return to constructive dialogue in CSTO military bloc

Moscow encourages Yerevan to abandon emotional public criticism, start talks to eliminate controversies

Russia urged Armenia to stop publicly criticizing the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and start talks to eliminate existing controversies, Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Pankin said Thursday.

Pankin told Russian news agency, RIA, that all CSTO members are interested in improving the group and increasing its efficiency and in this regard, Armenia's return to "full-fledged work" would contribute to achieving those goals.

"Unfortunately, our Armenian allies have really distanced themselves from it so far. We urge our colleagues in Yerevan, instead of public emotional attacks and criticism of the Organization, to start discussing urgent issues at the political and expert levels," he said.

Pankin emphasized that the continuation of a mutually respectful, constructive dialogue within the CSTO meets the fundamental interests of Armenia for security and serves to maintain peace and stability in the Eurasian space, including the South Caucasus region.

Armenia criticized the Russia-led military bloc for not preventing Azerbaijan from liberating its internationally recognized territories that were under Armenian occupation for more than 30 years.

Azerbaijan liberated most of the region during a 44-day war in the fall of 2020. Last September, the Azerbaijani army initiated an anti-terrorism operation in Karabakh and liberated the rest of its territories, ending 30 years of Armenian occupation.

COMMENT: An Armenia-Azerbaijan ‘peace’ is further away than ever

Feb 8 2024

By Neil Hauer in Yerevan February 8, 2024

Over the past few months, speculation over an impending Armenia-Azerbaijan peace treaty has reached a fever pitch. Numerous articles have suggested that the two sides are close to a final agreement, while both EU and US officials have expressed optimism on the long-running negotiations.

Perhaps the most positive outlook has come from officials of the two governments themselves: Top Azerbaijani officials expressed in late December that the two sides were “not that much far away from a final agreement”, while Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated in October that his government was ready to sign a peace treaty by the end of 2023.

But these rosy public proclamations are a poor reflection of reality. A raft of incontrovertible issues remains between the two sides, particularly rooted in Azerbaijan’s escalating demands while it continues to exert military pressure on Armenia. Barely four months after the full-scale ethnic cleansing of Nagorno-Karabakh of its ethnic Armenian inhabitants following Azerbaijan’s military offensive there in September, the list of sticking points for a peace agreement is growing, not shrinking.

Despite the public enthusiasm by both Armenian and Azerbaijani representatives, the talks themselves have long since stalled, analysts say.

“I think we are nowhere,” says Gevorg Melikyan, head of the Yerevan-based Armenian Institute for Resilience and Statecraft, when asked where talks are at now. “This process is not moving forward. It is just more and more demands by the Azerbaijani side, more and more preconditions,” he says.

Armenia has shown a willingness to compromise on many issues, most notably that of Nagorno-Karabakh. Already in May 2023, the Armenian government announced it would recognise the disputed region as part of Azerbaijan, although this did not stop Baku’s then-ongoing blockade of the region or forestall its eventually military takeover.

Armenia has also proposed numerous suggestions for unblocking regional transport links, something that was stipulated as part of the November 2020 trilateral ceasefire agreement signed between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia to end the 2020 Second Karabakh War.

Azerbaijan, however, has been obstinate. The Ilham Aliyev regime insists on the opening of what it calls the “Zangezur corridor”, envisioned as a road along Armenia’s southern border with Iran that will connect mainland Azerbaijan with its exclave of Nakhchivan. Azerbaijani officials have insisted that Armenia will not be allowed to exercise any customs control over the road, despite it passing through Armenia’s sovereign territory.

“[What the] Azerbaijani government actually wants is that Armenia will not have any control over this corridor, over anything passing over the territory of Armenia to Nakhchivan,” says Altay Goyushov, head of the Baku-based Baku Research Institute. “I think this is the most important thing for Azerbaijan, but at the same time, it’s not the only thing. Azerbaijan is using different kinds of excuses to avoid the peace agreement – demanding changes in the [Armenian] constitution, demanding the return of exclaves, and other things. All of these [elements] are combined to put pressure on the Armenian side,” he says.

Public backlash

The recent demands by Azerbaijan to modify Armenia’s constitution have become another sticking point. Pashinyan and other top Armenian officials have mooted the idea recently, resulting in major controversy and a public backlash.

“This is a totally unacceptable demand, and something that the [Armenian] government seems to not really understand the scope of, especially in the way it is presenting it,” Melikyan says. “Having one man [Pashinyan], who wakes up in the morning and thinks that it’s in Armenia’s interest to change the constitution, is not acceptable [to society].

“If Pashinyan tries to make a referendum [with these changes], he will fail, because it means that every time Azerbaijan wants to make a change to Armenia’s symbols, history, narratives, whatever, that we must do it,” he says.

Perhaps the most alarming aspect of Azerbaijan’s rhetoric is its repeated references to ‘Western Azerbaijan,’ an irredentist political concept used to extend territorial claims to the entirety of the present-day Republic of Armenia.

Far from a fringe suggestion, the concept of ‘Western Azerbaijan’ – and of Baku’s rightful sovereignty over it – has been mentioned repeatedly by Azerbaijan’s highest official. Aliyev is a noted proponent of the idea, lamenting in a January 10 speech how “ancient Azerbaijani lands” – including the Armenian capital, Yerevan – were “given” to Armenia a century ago. The loss of these lands, according to Aliyev, was “a great historical crime”.

Invoking this sentiment is a clear declaration of Aliyev’s intention to create a pretext for a broader invasion of Armenia, under the guise of “reclaiming” ancient Azerbaijani land, Melikyan says.

“It’s very serious. I don’t know why people think [these statements] are just a bluff,” he says. “It’s a strategic approach to say, ‘we have legal rights to take over Yerevan, we have the legal right to enter it’. When autocratic states start a war, they find pseudo-legal justifications for it. In this case, they will say, ‘well, we don’t want to attack, but we need to restore justice’. And in the name of justice, people go to war,” Melikyan says.

Internal messaging

Another explanation for such statements is that of internal messaging, an attempt to consolidate Aliyev’s legitimacy among the population, Goyushov says, while not excluding the possibility of further military action on the same basis.

“There’s no doubt that [this talk] has some elements of putting pressure on the Armenian side,” he says. “But the most important is the internal audience. Firstly, it’s about [directing society] to focus on the foreign enemy, which is Armenia. It’s important [for Aliyev] to galvanise society around his only achievement, the war in Karabakh. It’s also kind of a competition against the leaders of the First Republic [of Azerbaijan, 1918-20], to downgrade their achievements by saying that they made a lot of mistakes. That’s why even in this speech, Aliyev says that the mistakes stopped being made when Heydar [Aliyev, his father] came to power [in 1969],” Goyushov says.

But even if this sort of messaging is the main point, a further war based on the same logic can hardly be ruled out.

“He’s a dictator, and dictators are unpredictable,” Goyushov says. “They can make reckless decisions. What should be taken into account is the way that it can have an impact on the public in general, where people then ask, if Yerevan is our city, why are we not liberating it?” he says.

While the idea of the public taking such claims seriously may seem farfetched, Goyushov emphasises that the degree of mass inoculation by state propaganda in Azerbaijan makes such a possibility entirely plausible.

“People in Azerbaijan, young people especially, they really believe this [falsified history],” says Goyushov, who also lectures at Baku State University. “For example, when I am teaching a class about the Crusades and I mention their interactions with Armenia, students will stand up and ask me how that’s possible. They say that Armenians were not here then [in the Middle Ages], that they were only brought by the Russian Empire. So that’s what makes [these irredentist claims] so dangerous and unpredictable,” Goyushov says.

In such an atmosphere, it’s very difficult to imagine any genuine progress towards a mutual understanding, let alone a durable peace agreement.

“We have so little information on what is actually being discussed that we can only guess,” says Melikyan. “Despite the fact that we [Armenia] are supposedly democratic, we have almost no more information about what Pashinyan is saying than Azerbaijan does [about Aliyev]. We can say that [Pashinyan] is very eager to sign some sort of agreement, maybe not even a peace treaty, but Azerbaijan is not willing,” he says.

For Aliyev, meanwhile, the only real priority is to continue entrenching his control over the country – something that leaves room only for more militarism and violence.

“Despite everything, despite his victory, Aliyev still feels insecure,” Goyushov says. “That’s why we see these North Korea-style elections, the most controlled we have ever had. Meanwhile, the economy is declining, people are only going to be faced with more problems, while Aliyev and his family are only going to face more pressure [from society]. Things here are bad, but they are going to get much worse.”

Greek parliament ratifies EU-Armenia aviation space agreement

Feb 8 2024


The Greek parliament plenary ratified on Wednesday the European Union-Armenia Common Aviation Area Agreement by a large majority, with only the Communist Party of Greece voting against it.

Voting for the bill tabled by the Infrastructure & Transport Ministry were the ruling New Democracy, main opposition SYRIZA, PASOK, Greek Solution, Spartiates, Nea Aristera, and Niki. Voting against it was the Communist Party of Greece, while Plefsi Eleftherias voted ‘present’.

The agreement aims for the gradual opening of the market for direct flights for all EU and Armenian airlines between the two, providing a regulatory framework and setting out standards for a wide range of aviation issues with which Armenian law will be gradually aligned.

Armenia, Armenian community in Ukraine deliver 10 tons of medical equipment to Ukrainian military hospital

yahoo!news
Feb 9 2024

Representatives of the Union of Armenians of Ukraine and the Armenian Embassy in Ukraine delivered 10 tons of medical equipment to one of Ukraine's main military hospitals on Feb. 9, Ukraine's Defense Ministry said.

Armenia has long been an ally of Russia, especially vis-a-vis its primary regional foe Azerbaijan, and has thus largely refrained from getting involved in Russia's full-scale war against Ukraine. The calculus changed after Russian "peacekeepers" failed to prevent Azerbaijan's offensive into the Nagorno-Karabakh region, primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, in September 2023.

Armenia delivered its first batch of humanitarian aid to Ukraine that same month. The country's relationship with Russia has deteriorated since the offensive and subsequent collapse of the unrecognized ethnic Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh republic.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said earlier in February that Armenia's defense strategy cannot rely on Russia as it used to.

"At this difficult time for Ukraine, when a full-scale war has been going on for almost two years, Armenia offers a helping hand," said Armenia's ambassador to Ukraine, Vladimir Karapetyan.

Karapetyan also said that up to 12,000 ethnic Armenians are fighting with Ukraine's military, including Armenians with Ukrainian citizenship. Estimates of Ukraine's Armenian population vary but range from 100,000 to 400,000.

More than 300 ethnic Armenians have been awarded medals for military heroism, Karapetyan said.

The medical equipment has a variety of uses, the defense ministry said.

Why Armenia and Azerbaijan Still Can’t Reach a Peace Deal

INKSTICK
Jan 9 2024

… and what Washington should do to help the two countries reach one.

  • INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
  • COMMENTARY
WORDS: ALEX LITTLE
PICTURES: SARIN AVENTISIAN
DATE: FEBRUARY 9, 2024

In December, three months after the devastating September 2023 Azerbaijani offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh displaced more than 100,000 Armenians, Yerevan and Baku engaged in bilateral talks that “reconfirmed their intention to normalize relations and to reach a peace treaty on the basis of respect for the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity.” 

While it is important that both sides remain engaged in negotiations, a sustainable peace settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan remains elusive. The question in Washington remains: Can the United States do anything to help the situation?

Throughout the high-tension episodes between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, each side has further entrenched its own nationalist rhetoric. Yerevan has primarily been concerned with the security and status of Karabakh Armenians who, since the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War, were increasingly faced with the threat of ethnic cleansing (a development that has, in fact, occurred, according to the European Parliament). Meanwhile, Baku has focused on restoring its territorial integrity as the de facto Nagorno-Karabakh statelet was always internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.  

Azerbaijan’s latest offensive resulted in the forceful integration of Nagorno-Karabakh, resembling Russia’s 1999-2000 reabsorption of Chechnya after the Soviet Union’s collapse gave way to a separatist war. However, myriad problems remain unresolved and may once again provoke conflict in the South Caucasus. 

The more than 100,000 Armenians who fled the region face uncertainty in the Republic of Armenia. After enduring a nine-month Azerbaijani blockade of vital supplies from Armenia and the outside world, Karabakh Armenians are facing harsh conditions in Armenia proper — the state is unable to allocate sufficient resources for many families, and many working-age people are unable to find jobs. According to official Armenian figures, 38% of the refugees now live in Yerevan, but the cost of living in and around the capital is far more expensive than anywhere else in the country. 

Despite support from Europe and the United States, which have been minimal thus far, absorbing more than 30,000 Karabakh Armenian refugees after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and 100,000 after September 2023 is no easy task for a country of three million people, especially since they have cultural and linguistic differences from their ethnic kin raised in the Republic of Armenia. The difficulties imposed by the inflow of migrants have led more than 10,000 Karabakh refugees to settle elsewhere, with a majority choosing Russia, motivated primarily by family bonds and other connections there. 

Given that economically challenged Armenia is finding it difficult to reintegrate Karabakh Armenians into society, it remains an open question whether there is an opportunity for these migrants to return to their homes in Karabakh. 

After Baku established control over Nagorno-Karabakh, hundreds of Armenian monasteries, churches, cemeteries, and shrines are now at risk of erasure, as evidenced by Azerbaijan’s previous cultural erasure that occurred after the war in 2020. One of the authors of a 2019 report documenting previous instances of cultural cleansing referred to Azerbaijan’s actions in the region as “the greatest cultural genocide of the 21st century.” 

Despite Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s announcement that the “Armenian population living in Karabakh will soon see a change for the better,” Armenians are skeptical of returning to their original homes without international oversight. At present, it is estimated that only a few dozen Karabakh Armenians remain in the region and most who have fled express little interest in returning without international guarantees following decades of ethnic hostility.

The possibility of renewed escalation still hangs over the region. President Aliyev’s insistence on establishing what Azerbaijanis call the “Zangezur corridor,” which would connect its mainland territory with its exclave Nakhchivan, negatively impacts the progress of peace talks, with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan calling such demands “totally unacceptable.”

President Aliyev had previously made remarks with his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, that such a corridor could be established by force, irrespective of Yerevan’s wishes. Such rhetoric has alarmed Yerevan and gravely concerned Iran, one of Armenia’s largest trade partners. In October, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi said his country  is “strongly opposed” to such a corridor that would disrupt the land border between the two countries. Tehran has proposed an alternative route through Iranian territory.

Prospects for the United States to make an impact in peace negotiations are dim. 

Yet, Azerbaijan has remained adamant about establishing a corridor through Armenia, as President Aliyev said in the January 2024 interview. Aliyev mentioned that if the Zangezur corridor is not opened, Azerbaijan will not “open [its] border with Armenia anywhere else.”

Lastly, the status of the remaining Armenian prisoners of war hangs in the air. A swap of 32 Armenian prisoners and two Azerbaijani captives that took place between the countries in December 2023 was widely welcomed by the international community. Armenian human rights activists said there were still at least 23 Armenians in Azerbaijani captivity, including former de facto politicians from Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian prisoners should have been released in accordance with the November 2020 ceasefire agreement. To achieve long-lasting peace, respecting previous agreements is necessary. 

Considering these factors, what could Washington’s impact on the Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations look like? Currently, it is difficult for the United States to act as a direct broker of peace. Azerbaijan no longer supports Western-backed platforms for negotiations and instead champions bilateral talks or Moscow’s brokerage, as Russia has pivoted from providing meaningful support to Armenia. In effect, Baku, which previously welcomed Western mediation, ended its support for Western-mediated platforms after achieving its aims of dissolving the breakaway statelet. 

American-Azerbaijani relations rapidly soured in the final months of 2023, especially following US Assistant Secretary of State James O’Brien’s Congressional statement that the US had canceled high-level bilateral meetings and engagements with Azerbaijan while expressing sympathy for Armenia. Although diplomatic meetings resumed after O’Brien’s announcement, prospects for the United States to make an impact in peace negotiations are dim. 

Europe’s opportunities to play a role are also almost nonexistent as France, which hosts a sizable Armenian community, sent weapons to Armenia following the September 2023 Azerbaijani offensive. This has resulted in an escalation in tensions between Baku and Paris, as Azerbaijan arrested a Frenchman in December 2023 on espionage charges, to which France responded by expelling two Azerbaijani diplomats. At the same time, Baku has cracked down on independent journalists in Azerbaijan in a hunt for “US spies.”

Rather than attempting to steer peace negotiations directly, several principles should guide Washington’s policy toward the two countries as they seek to stabilize their relations.

These include continued encouragement for prioritizing diplomatic solutions to mitigate future conflict, supporting future conversations regarding the return of Karabakh Armenians to their homes in Azerbaijan and political prisoners and POWs to Armenia, and following through on current humanitarian assistance to Karabakh Armenians in Armenia. While Azerbaijan has invited Karabakh Armenians back to the region (granted that they apply for Azerbaijani citizenship and would have no special rights or guarantees), it is clear that they will need international oversight to feel safe returning to Azerbaijan.

Still, as things stand now, the likelihood of the integrating Karabakh Armenians into Azerbaijan, even with international involvement, appears slim. This process will likely only come in the event of genuine reconciliation between Armenians and Azeris. Washington should continue encouraging the two countries to advance toward such an agreement.

The United States is currently unwilling to do much more diplomatic work in the South Caucasus. But it can pursue a limited set of initiatives to make peace in the region more likely and long-lasting.

https://inkstickmedia.com/why-armenia-and-azerbaijan-still-cant-reach-a-peace-deal/?fbclid=IwAR399_AGG8VHoIHqVBonmc8XYD6_daxxvrmvlVm-T-TnW-EtHwBFjJFl6DM

Greece Sees Opportunities in EU and Armenia Aviation Agreement

Feb 9 2024
Posted On 09 Feb 2024
By : GTP editing team

Greece expects the recently implemented Common Aviation Area Agreement (CAAA) between the EU and Armenia to create new opportunities for the promotion of its tourism product and for consumers, airlines and airports, said Deputy Transport Minister Christina Alexopoulou this week.

Addressing parliament, Alexopoulou said the EU’s approval of the common aviation area agreement with Armenia would pave the way for synergies with airlines and air transport, which she added, was a Greek government priority.

Signed in 2021, the agreement entered administrative application last month, aims to remove market restrictions and create a common aviation area between Armenia and the EU. The deal will also facilitate people-to-people contacts and expand commercial opportunities and trade between the EU and Armenia.

The minister also referred to flight safety standards achieved by Greece.

Earlier this year, Transport Minister Christos Staikouras and Acting Executive Director of the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) Luc Tytgat discussed Greece’s strong performance with regard to safety standards and strengthening regulatory policies in the aviation sector.

“Greece increased its implementation levels of international standards from 69.1 percent to 74.89 percent, compared to the global average of 69.3 percent,” she said.

Under the agreement, all EU airlines will be able to operate direct flights from anywhere in the EU to any airport in Armenia, and vice versa for Armenian airlines.

Concluding, Alexopoulou said the agreement further strengthens ties between Greece and Armenia.

The EU-Armenia CAAA was ratified by the Greek parliament plenary on Wednesday, February 7, by a large majority.

Azerbaijan Condemns Armenia’s Criticism at OSCE Meeting

WE News, Pakistan
Feb 9 2024

BAKU, Azerbaijan: In a firm rebuttal, the Permanent Mission of Azerbaijan to the OSCE has criticized Armenia’s recent remarks concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and regional stability. Armenia, accused of initiating the war of aggression against Azerbaijan and occupying a significant portion of its territory, has been cautioned against lecturing other nations on matters of history, law, and human rights.

The statement emphasized Armenia’s reluctance to engage constructively in advancing peace talks and normalizing relations with Azerbaijan. Despite progress in bilateral negotiations and confidence-building measures, Armenia’s rhetoric at the OSCE remains entrenched in outdated conflict perceptions, hindering meaningful dialogue.

Following Azerbaijan’s restoration of sovereignty over its entire territory and the dissolution of the illegal regime in the formerly occupied areas, Armenia is urged to acknowledge the new reality and prioritize fulfilling its commitments. The path to regional security, confidence-building, and addressing the consequences of aggression lies in peaceful coexistence and mutual recognition of sovereignty and territorial integrity.

As Azerbaijan progresses in reintegration and rehabilitation efforts, Armenia is encouraged to embrace the prospect of a prosperous future for all residents of the Karabakh region. However, Armenia’s reluctance to acknowledge this reality suggests a reluctance to rectify past wrongs and foster genuine reconciliation.

In conclusion, Azerbaijan reaffirms its commitment to regional stability and calls upon Armenia to take meaningful steps towards redressing the harm caused by its actions.

Azerbaijan Must Show a Victor’s Wisdom

Feb 9 2024



By Emil Avdaliani
February 9, 2024

Armenia has signaled it might alter its constitution. But while this could open the way to peace, its relations with Azerbaijan remain dominated by raw power.

Flush from its lightening victory over Armenia’s Nagorno-Karabakh enclave in September, Azerbaijan seems in little mood to offer reconciliation.

It is demanding that Armenia’s constitution be rewritten. “It will be possible to achieve peace” if there are changes to several state documents, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev stated. The demand has been echoed by Armenia’s powerful neighbor Turkey.

Together, the two countries could open the way to improved regional relations, including border openings and improved transport links. Or they could spark a backlash that so angers Armenians that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is dumped at next year’s election, perhaps opening the way to a hardline nationalist.

Given what’s at stake, Pashinyan’s government has been surprisingly open to discussions.

In part, that’s because some Azeri demands sound harsher than they are. For example, while Azerbaijan remains determined to secure transportation links to its Nakhichevan exclave — the shortest passes through Armenian territory — the worst tensions have mostly subsided.

In October, Iran and Azerbaijan signed a railway agreement that envisions the transit from Azerbaijan proper to Nakhichevan via Iranian territory. This projected connectivity is beneficial to everyone in the region and could help pave the way for a wider Azeri-Armenian peace agreement.


Territory previously controlled by the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)

Territory controlled by Azerbaijan

Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic (Azerbaijan)

This would probably not be comprehensive, but instead compose a roadmap of some kind stipulating major principles, with the detail to be filled in later. Major principles would likely involve mutual territorial recognition, opening of borders, and potentially beginning the work toward establishing diplomatic relations.

Other questions, such as delimitation of borders and the issue of around 100,000 Armenians returning to Nagorno-Karabakh, would likely remain outside the framework.

That seems wise. The alternative would be another lengthy negotiating process to settle border issues before signing the deal. This would take months, if not years. Given Azerbaijan’s military superiority, it would be likely to intersperse the talks with army exercises to pressure its interlocutor.

The preamble of the current Constitution of Armenia refers to the reunification of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, the region which it won by force of arms in 1994. The circumstances under which the document was created — at the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the First Nagorno-Karabakh War — reflected the country’s mood back in the 1990s.

Now, following its defeats in 2020 and 2023, the balance of power very much favors Azerbaijan. And yet, while its demand to change the constitution is unprecedented, it is not impossible.

Surprisingly, government figures in Yerevan agree on the need to change the constitution. What might have been received with ridicule even a year ago is now supported by Pashinyan, who has on numerous occasions criticized the 1990 declaration and suggested plans to enact a new constitution. The planned document would address the new reality created following the fall of Nagorno-Karabakh and effectively acknowledge its loss.

Though a final decision has not yet been made, it seems that Armenia will eventually concede. But it expects mirror changes in Azerbaijan’s main state documents too. The Speaker of the National Assembly, Alen Simonyan, referred to the provisions in the constitution of Azerbaijan, which references Armenia as a hostile neighbor.

Armenia is not just seeking peace with Azerbaijan; it also wants better relations with Turkey, which closed its borders more than 30 years ago. The process has been lengthy and beset with delays, and much of its success depends on Yerevan-Baku talks.

Turkey objects to references in the Armenian constitution to the Armenian genocide and veiled territorial claims toward Turkey based on the post-World War I treaties that dissolved the Ottoman Empire.

These disputes do not take place in a vacuum, of course. There is an attentive domestic audience in Armenia, and Pashinyan has not been a popular leader. The opposition has been accusing him of state treason, which gives some sense of the debate. While the opposition (which is mostly openly pro-Russian) is currently even less popular, constitutional changes to meet foreign demands might further degrade Pashinyan’s standing.

It is a brave path to put aside historical grievances in a determined push toward mending ties with Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Even so, what matters most is not the signing of a peace deal in itself but whether the dominant parties — Azerbaijan and Turkey — show the sense not to push too hard. In that case, the South Caucasus will be set for more years of disputes.

Emil Avdaliani is a professor of international relations at European University in Tbilisi, Georgia, and a scholar of the silk road.

Europe’s Edge is CEPA’s online journal covering critical topics on the foreign policy docket across Europe and North America. All opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the position or views of the institutions they represent or the Center for European Policy Analysis.


Armenia Tightens Border Control Measures for EEU Goods: A New Chapter in Trade Regulations

Feb 9 2024
Mazhar Abbas
In a significant shift, the State Revenue Committee (SRC) of Armenia has announced stringent border control measures for goods imported from the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) member states. The new regulations, effective immediately, target shipments that have undergone unloading, reloading, or other cargo operations in third countries during transit.

The SRC's decision marks a stark departure from previous practices, where such goods were still classified as EEU goods, and violations were met with warnings. However, the observed decline in discipline among carriers and the subsequent abuse of these lenient regulations have prompted the SRC to reevaluate its stance.

Under the new rules, goods will no longer be recognized as imported from an EEU member country if they have been subjected to cargo operations in third countries without the customs authority's permission. This policy holds true, except in cases of accidents or force majeure.

The ramifications of this policy change are far-reaching. Goods that do not match their transit declarations while being transported from an EEU country will now be treated and cleared as products of a third country. If these goods are not correctly formalized as third-country products, their importation will be banned.

Despite these stringent measures, entrepreneurs are not left without recourse. They will still have the opportunity to present other evidence to prove the EEU status of their products.

The SRC's decision to tighten border control measures is a clear indication of its commitment to maintaining regulatory discipline and preventing abuse of the system. This move is expected to foster a more transparent and accountable trading environment, ultimately benefiting both Armenia and its EEU partners.

https://bnnbreaking.com/world/eurasia/armenia-tightens-border-control-measures-for-eeu-goods-a-new-chapter-in-trade-regulations