Friday, Armenia, Azerbaijan Urged To Finalize Peace Deal In 2023 Belgium - European Union flags flutter outside the European Commission headquarters in Brussels, June 5, 2020. The European Union urged Armenia and Azerbaijan on Friday to finalize a bilateral peace agreement before the end of this year. The EU’s decision-making Council discussed the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, among other issues, at a two-day meeting held in Brussels. “The European Council underlines the importance of ensuring the rights and security of the Karabakh Armenians, including those who wish to return to their homes,” it said in a concluding statement. “It supports the Brussels normalization process and calls on the Parties to engage in good faith and to finalize this process by the end of this year.” Council President Charles Michel said the 27-nation bloc is “determined” to continue its efforts to broker such a deal. “We had a strategic exchange on this subject, it was important to be well coordinated,” Michel told a news conference in Brussels. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev had been expected to sign a document laying out the key parameters of a peace treaty at a meeting with Michel and the leaders of Germany and France slated for October 5. However, Aliyev withdrew from the talks at the last minute, citing pro-Armenian statements made by French officials. Michel said afterwards that the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders will likely hold a trilateral meeting with him in Brussels later in October. Armenian and EU officials confirmed on Thursday that the rescheduled meeting will not take place in the coming days. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said Aliyev “did not find the time” for it. Yerevan maintains that the main hurdle to the signing of the peace treaty is Baku’s reluctance to recognize Armenia’s existing borders. The two sides continue to disagree on mechanisms for delimiting the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Russia has been very critical of Western peace efforts, saying that their main goal is to drive Moscow out of the South Caucasus. The Russian Foreign Ministry on Thursday chided Yerevan for preferring the EU mediation and declining Russian offers to host more Armenian-Azerbaijani talks. Armenian Official Downplays Tensions With Moscow • Aza Babayan Armenia - Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanian speaks to journalists in Syunik, July 28, 2023. Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanian on Friday downplayed Armenia’s unprecedented tensions with Russia and insisted that Yerevan is not radically changing its traditional foreign policy. “It’s a normal working process,” Kostanian told News.am. “The two partners have questions to each other, and we are clarifying things through diplomats.” He also reiterated Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s recent assurances that he has no plans to change the “vector” of Armenian foreign policy. Speaking to the Wall Street Journal this week, Pashinian reiterated that his government is now trying to “diversify” that policy because Russia and the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) have not honored their security commitments to Armenia. But he made clear that Yerevan is not considering demanding the withdrawal of Russian troops from the country even if it sees no “advantages” in their presence. An estimated 4,000 Russian soldiers backed up by MiG-29 fighter jets, helicopters and long-range air-defense systems are currently stationed in the South Caucasus state in accordance with bilateral treaties. One of those treaties signed in 2010 extended their presence until 2044. Citing senior Russian lawmakers, the Moscow daily Izvestia suggested on Friday that Yerevan cannot shut down the Russian military base before that time at will. The pro-Kremlin paper argued that another Russian-Armenian agreement, signed in 1995, stipulates that time frames for a possible pre-term closure of the base must be jointly agreed upon by the two sides. The Russian Foreign Ministry accused Pashinian late last month of seeking to ruin Russian-Armenian relations and reorient his country towards the West. Earlier in September, it deplored “a series of unfriendly steps” taken by Yerevan. Moscow reacted rather cautiously to the latest criticism voiced by Pashinian. Hungarian FM Makes Fence-Mending Visit To Armenia Armenia - Hungary's Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto at a joint news conference with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan, Yerevan, . Hungary’s foreign minister did not deny that his country blocked a collective condemnation by the European Union member states of Azerbaijan’s recent military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh as he visited Armenia on Friday to complete the normalization of bilateral ties. Armenia’s former leadership froze diplomatic relations with Hungary in 2012 after Hungarian authorities controversially extradited to Azerbaijan an Azerbaijani army officer who hacked to death a sleeping Armenian colleague in Budapest in 2004. The officer, Ramil Safarov, whom a Hungarian court sentenced to life imprisonment in 2006, was pardoned, rewarded and promoted by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on his return to Azerbaijan. The Hungarian government claimed to have received prior assurances by Baku that Safarov would serve the rest of his life sentence in an Azerbaijani prison. Yerevan dismissed that explanation. The current Armenian government decided to restore the diplomatic ties last year even though Hungary never apologized for Safarov’s release and continued to support Azerbaijan in the Karabakh conflict. Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Hungarian counterpart Peter Szijjarto reached an agreement to that effect when they met in Poland in December 2022. Yerevan and Budapest appointed non-resident ambassadors to each other’s country earlier this year. Hungary -- Thousands of people protest against the government's decision to extradite soldier Ramil Safarov, in Budapest, 04Sep2012 Visiting Yerevan, Szijjarto emphasized the “Christian heritage and Christian faith” shared by the two nations. “This is the easiest foundation based on which we can rebuild this relationship,” he told Mirzoyan at the start of their talks. He also voiced support for Armenia’s efforts to deepen ties with the EU. Szijjarto’s visit came one month after the Azerbaijani offensive that restored Baku’s full control over Karabakh and forced its entire ethnic Armenian population to flee to Armenia. “The EU condemns the military operation by Azerbaijan against the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh and deplores the casualties and loss of life caused by this escalation,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in a September 21 statement. Rikard Jozwiak, RFE/RL’s Europe editor, reported that the statement was due to be issued by the EU’s 27 member states but that Hungary blocked it. The Azerbaijani news agency Trend likewise cited “sources in European diplomatic circles” as saying that Budapest vetoed its adoption. Szijjarto commented vaguely on the issue during a joint news conference with Mirzoyan. He said only that Borrell is free to make statements on various issues and that the Hungarian government does not think it necessary to “agree on what he should say on behalf of everyone.” In an October 5 resolution, the European Parliament accused Azerbaijan of committing “ethnic cleansing” against the Karabakh Armenians and called on the EU to impose sanctions on Azerbaijani leaders. HUNGARY - Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán (r) and Azerbaijani Presdent Ilham Aliyev at a joint press conference in Budapest, January 30, 2023. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has long maintained a warm rapport with Aliyev, spoke out against such sanctions the following day. He said Azerbaijan is a “strategically important country” which is helping Europe reduce its dependence on Russian natural gas. “Without Azerbaijan we cannot have energy independence,” Orban told reporters during an EU summit in Spain. “It’s a great country, we need them.” Unlike other EU member states, Hungary has openly supported Azerbaijan in the Karabakh conflict. The Hungarian Foreign Ministry reaffirmed that support three days after the outbreak of the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war in Karabakh. Shortly after the six-week war, Orban’s government encouraged Hungarian firms to participate in infrastructure projects planned by Baku in areas recaptured by the Azerbaijani army. Szijjarto said at the time that Hungary’s state-run development bank is ready to lend them $100 million for that purpose. Mirzoyan did not mention Hungary’s pro-Azerbaijani stance when he spoke at the news conference with Szijjarto. Instead, he thanked Budapest for providing over $100,000 worth of humanitarian aid to Karabakh refugees. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian similarly called for closer Armenian-Hungarian ties “in various areas” when he met with the Hungarian minister later in the day. Nobody Charged In Renewed Probe Of 1999 Parliament Killings • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia -- People lay flowers at a memorial to the victims of the October 1999 deadly attack on the Armenian parliament, Yerevan, October 27, 2019. Four years after reopening a criminal investigation into the 1999 deadly attack on the Armenian parliament, law-enforcement authorities have identified no new suspects in the high-profile case. Five gunmen who burst into the National Assembly and sprayed it with bullets on October 27, 1999, killing its speaker Karen Demirchian, Prime Minister Vazgen Sarkisian and six other officials. The gunmen led by an obscure former journalist, Nairi Hunanian, accused the Armenian government of corruption and misrule and demanded regime change. They surrendered to police after overnight negotiations with then President Robert Kocharian. They were subsequently tried and sentenced to life imprisonment. Hunanian insisted during his and his henchmen’s marathon trial that he himself had decided to seize the parliament without anybody's orders. Nevertheless, some relatives and supporters of the assassinated officials still suspect Kocharian and his successor President Serzh Sarkisian (no relation to Vazgen), who was Armenia’s national security minister in October 1999, of masterminding the killings to eliminate powerful rivals. Both men repeatedly dismissed such suggestions during and after a serious political crisis caused by the killings. In 2004, investigators formally stopped looking for other individuals possibly involved in the attack, citing a lack of evidence. Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General overturned that decision in 2019. In a statement released on Friday, the office acknowledged that nobody has been indicted in the renewed investigation. But it stressed that the probe is still not over, saying that investigators are continuing to conduct forensic tests and examine documents as well as audios and videos relating to the case. They have also interrogated about a dozen individuals, added the statement timed to coincide with the 24th anniversary of the shootings. It did not name them. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian pledged to find and punish “organizers” of the killings when he campaigned for the 2021 parliamentary elections. He pointed the finger at Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian, claiming that Armenian security services had been aware that Hunanian and his men will carry out the attack. The investigators have not publicly backed up Pashinian’s claim. 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