PM Barzani, Armenian president discuss bilateral relations in Davos

Kurdistan 24
Jan 18 2024

Prime Minister Masrour Barzani on Thursday discussed bilateral relations with Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturyan in Davos. 

 Wladimir van Wilgenburg

ERBIL (Kurdistan24) – Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani on Thursday met with Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturyan in Davos.

The PM Masrour Barzani in a post on X said he was glad to see the Armenian President at Davos.

"The Kurdistan Region and Armenia share a common goal: peace and stability for our peoples and the region," he wrote.

The latest developments in Iraq and the region and the development of relations between the Kurdistan Region and Armenia were discussed during the meeting.

Both sides agreed on the importance of maintaining security and stability in the Kurdistan Region and Iraq and eliminating tensions in the Middle East.

Read More: PM Barzani meets outgoing Armenian envoy in Kurdistan Region

Armenia officially inaugurated its official consulate general in the Kurdish capital of Erbil on Feb. 24, 2021.

According to Armenia's Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs, around 7,000 to 8,000 Armenians live in Iraq, including 3,000 of them living in the Kurdistan Region.
The majority of Armenians in the Kurdistan Region, between 850 to 900, live in the independent Zakho administration.

Also in May 2019, the first Armenian Orthodox church in Erbil's Christian-majority Ankawa district in the Kurdistan Region.

https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/story/33787-PM-Barzani,-Armenian-president-discuss-bilateral-relations-in-Davos

Sports: Who is Elina Avanesyan? 21-Year-Old Russian Nears Becoming Tennis Millionaire After Conquering Maria Sakkari at Australian Open 2024

The Sports Rush
Jan 18 2024

Puranjay Dixit

Elina Avanesyan joined the long list of budding Russian WTA stars making the tennis fraternity sit up and take notice. She blazed past Maria Sakkari in the second round of the 2024 Australian Open. Now, the youngster is within touching distance of the $1 million milestone in career prize money.

Sakkari’s Grand Slam struggles continued as she was ousted in the second round by Avanesyan. Before defeating the Greek star, the 21-year-old beat Zhuoxuan Bai to kickstart her maiden Australian Open campaign. She will also begin her women’s doubles run with Belarusian Iryna Shymanovich on Thursday.

After reaching the third round in the women’s singles category, Avanesyan will take home at least A$180,000 ($121,770). Meanwhile, a first-round appearance in doubles is worth $24,550 (A$36,000), divided equally between both players. Hence, as it stands, Avanesyan will add a minimum of $134,045 to her existing prize money kitty of $809,169.

However, to breach the $1 million mark, she needs to win her upcoming singles and doubles ties. Doing so will bump her assured earnings up to $172,508 for singles and $18,072 in doubles ($36,144 for the team). Reaching the fourth round in singles and the second round in doubles guarantees her a sum of $191,210, enabling her career prize money winnings to cross the million-dollar milestone.

This would be a huge feat for someone who made her WTA Tour debut only in April 2022. Avanesyan broke into the top 100 with some good performances in 2023. She reached the fourth round of the French Open and second round of the US Open for a career-best World No.62 rank, before ending the season as No.75.

Avanesyan, World No.324 in doubles, resides in Spain, training under María José Llorca Pons. Currently World No. 74 in singles, she is sponsored by Head and Adidas.

2023 proved to be a breakthrough season for Elina Avanesyan. En route to some great results, she beat top names like Belinda Bencic, Alize Cornet, and Daria Kasatkina. She earned the biggest victory of her nascent career after defeating World No.8 Maria Sakkari in the second round of the 2024 Australian Open.

Avanesyan will now face World No.37 Marta Kostyuk. The Ukrainian was embroiled in controversy recently after she refused to play Mirra Andreeva in an exhibition match in December 2023. She did not agree to play against the Russian because of their ongoing war against Ukraine.

However, Kostyuk will have to play Andreeva’s compatriot Avanesyan in a match that could see tempers flare. Regardless, the latter will be gunning for a victory to get one step closer to the $1 million prize money benchmark. The third round clash will take place on Friday, January 19, at 2:00 p.m. local time (10:00 pm on Wednesday, January 18 ET). ESPN will air this match.

On the doubles side, Avanesyan will take to the court with Iryna Shymanovich on Thursday, January 18, not before 7:00 p.m. local time (3:00 a.m. ET).

https://thesportsrush.com/tennis-news-who-is-elina-avanesyan-21-year-old-russian-becomes-tennis-millionaire-after-conquering-maria-sakkari-at-australian-open-2024/ 

Armenian Archbishop arrives Bethlehem for Christmas

Reuters Via Yahoo!
Jan 18 2024

STORY: Many Christians mark the date on December 25, based on the Gregorian calendar, while several Orthodox Christians commemorate the event to recognize the birth of Jesus on January 7.

Some Armenian churches celebrate on January 19, when the Christmas Mass will be held, making them the last of the Eastern Churches to mark the event.

Leaders from the various churches arrive every year at the church to kick off their Christmas Eve celebrations.

Watch the video at https://news.yahoo.com/armenian-archbishop-arrives-bethlehem-christmas-152603701.html

Honorary titles will no longer be awarded in Armenia

Jan 16 2024
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Abolition of honorary titles

Armenia is abolishing awarding honorary titles. The National Assembly adopted a package of amendments in the first reading — 64 deputies from the ruling majority voted in favor; 31 deputies, i.e. the opposition, voted “against”.

The Ministry of Justice initiated the abolition of titles. Presenting the package of amendments in the parliament, Deputy Minister of Justice Armenuhi Harutyunyan said that the decision to abolish the titles does not mean that the state will stop encouraging the activities of its citizens. Prizes and awards for specific activities in any sphere can be used to encourage merit.


  • Pashinyan proposes to establish arms control. Will Baku agree?
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  • Employment programs in Armenia for refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh

According to the current legislation, there are 17 honorary titles. Among them are “People’s Artist”, “People’s Artist”, “Honored Art Worker”, “Honored Culture Worker”, “Honored Journalist”.

After the final parliamentary approval of the amendments to the law “On State Awards and Honorary Titles of the Republic of Armenia” they will no longer be awarded. The title “Honored Collective” is declared an exception. It will be retained, as it does not concern individuals.

Previously awarded titles will be retained.

Parliament approved this initiative in the first reading. “MPs of the ruling majority voted in favor. The opposition abstained, as they consider such steps “a loophole for evasion of service”

The Ministry of Justice believes that in developed countries it is not customary to award honorary titles to personalities. Moreover, they argue that honorary titles are not only an outdated concept, but also have a negative impact on “healthy competition and moral and psychological atmosphere”.

Deputy Justice Minister Armenuhi Harutyunyan emphasized that the time has come to abandon this Soviet legacy.

“Popularity cannot be assessed by any specific criteria. It is obvious that popularity, public recognition, public perception of someone’s image or creative activity can be neither checked, nor measured, nor confirmed, nor rejected by any state body.”

The deputy minister believes that rewarding professionals should be based on “measurable and concrete” results, such as prizes and awards by field. She says industry competitions award prizes for a specific product of a person’s activity. Unlike a title, which is “awarded for life”.

How much property has been confiscated, what the “revolutionary” Pashinyan government intends to do to fulfill its promise to return all the looted property before it to the treasury

The parliamentary opposition believes that the country’s authorities are simply abandoning tradition. Lilit Galstyan, a deputy of the Hayastan faction (Armenia), said that “it is not appropriate to present a legislative initiative of such a [obscene] level to the parliament”. In her opinion, the authorities are rejecting the authority of individuals and national elites:

“We are dealing with a rejection of existing traditions and heritage, another attempt to start from scratch.”

Gegham Nazarian, a deputy from the same faction, is not clear what problem the state intends to solve. He asked his colleagues if behind this is the desire to save 40000 drams ($100) paid to folk artists:

“If this is the whole problem, we could have said that we will not give money to folk artists. This 40,000 is needed, for example, to encourage shepherds.”

Deputy Minister of Justice Armenuhi Harutyunyan replied that those who have already received titles will continue to receive the sums due to them. She also said that in this case the state is not interested in saving money.

https://jam-news.net/abolition-of-honorary-titles-in-armenia/

Armenian dancers, musicians to perform at HWS

 Finger Lakes Times 
Jan 17 2024


GENEVA — Straight from Armenia, the Golden Gates Dancers, a group of young talented dancers and musicians, will be in Geneva Wednesday, Jan. 17, through Friday, Jan. 19, and will present a public performance on Thursday at 7 p.m. at Albright Auditorium at Hobart and William Smith Colleges.

The group is coming under the auspices of the Reunite Cultures Fund, which supports programs that promote good will between the people of America and other countries to develop a better understanding of cultures, music and traditions and build cultural bridges.

Students from Armenia and Lithuania have previously visited Geneva under the same program. The Geneva Rotary Club is facilitating their stop in the city. Members of the group are staying with Rotarians while they are here.

Golden Gates started to tour the United States nationally in 2003. Each tour lasts four to five weeks and covers 20 to 25 states.

Besides the performance at HWS, the Dancers will perform at Geneva High School on Thursday, and the Rotary Club is organizing a dinner for the students and the adults traveling with them at the Sons and Daughters of Italy lodge.

They will perform elaborate lyrical suites and pulsating dances of foot-stomping ferocity, bringing to life a taste of their culture in a whirlwind of colorful costumes and exotic sounds.

The company offers audiences an entertaining and authentic glimpse into Armenian culture through music, song and dance. The program is broad and varied, with something to appeal to everyone, including audience participation through clapping and learning Armenian songs and words.

Spiritual duduk, a double-reed woodwind instrument, dynamic dohl, a double-headed drum, qanun, an Arabic stringed instrument, kamancheh, a Persian bowed string instrument, traditional dances and superb vocals combine for an exhilarating and educational performance for audiences of all ages.

“This is a chance for real people to meet and get a glimpse of Armenian culture,” said Vitally Bezrodnov, leader of the Reunite Cultures Fund, who travels with the group.

https://www.fltimes.com/arts_and_entertainment/around-the-lakes-armenian-dancers-musicians-to-perform-at-hws/article_3c7d1eb8-b3ee-11ee-9fe3-ef58db980858.html

Exchange Students from Armenia to Perform In Geneva

Finger Lakes Daily News
Jan 17 2024

Young musicians from Armenia will perform in Albright Auditorium on Thursday, Jan. 18.

Hobart and William Smith will host the performance of ArmFolk, a folk ensemble of high school students from Armenia, who are visiting the U.S. as part of Rotary International Friendship Program. The show is free and open to the public and will begin at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 18 in Albright Auditorium. While in Geneva, the group will also perform at Geneva High School on Thursday morning.

The group of talented performers will offer a presentation of Armenian culture through music and dance. Traditional instruments such as the Spiritual Duduk (woodwind instrument), Dhol (double-headed drum) and Qanun (string instrument) will provide exotic and captivating sounds to accompany musical compositions incorporating lively dances, superb vocals and vibrant costumes.

A dinner and reception will be held prior to the performance at the home of President Mark D. Gearan and Mary Herlihy Gearan at 690 South Main St.

As part of Rotary International Friendship Program, Geneva Rotarians will host the exchange students in their homes.

Listen to the FLX Morning Podcast Interview

https://www.fingerlakesdailynews.com/local/ontario-seneca-wayne/exchange-students-from-armenia-to-perform-in-geneva

Exchange students from Armenia to perform at HWS

 Finger Lakes Times 
Jan 17 2024

  •   

    GENEVA — Young musicians from Armenia will perform on the campus of Hobart and William Smith Colleges Thursday night.

    Albright Auditorium will host the performance of ArmFolk, a folk ensemble of high school students from Armenia visiting the United States as part of Rotary International Friendship Program. The show is free and open to the public and will begin at 7 p.m.

    While in Geneva, the group will perform at Geneva High School on Thursday morning.

    The group will offer a presentation of Armenian culture through music and dance. Traditional instruments such as the Spiritual Duduk (woodwind instrument), Dhol (double-headed drum) and Qanun (string instrument) will provide exotic and captivating sounds to accompany musical compositions incorporating lively dances, superb vocals and vibrant costumes.

    A dinner and reception will be held prior to the performance at the home of President Mark D. Gearan and Mary Herlihy Gearan at 690 S. Main St.

    As part of Rotary International Friendship Program, Geneva Rotarians are hosting the exchange students in their homes.

    Can Armenia’s refugee crisis catalyse health-system reforms?

    THE LANCET
    Jan 16 2024

    • Christopher MarkosianKim Hekimian, 
    • Kent Garber
    • Ara Darzi
    • Shant Shekherdimian

    Published:DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)02459-5


    After more than 30 years, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has culminated in a sudden mass exodus of more than 100 000 refugees from the region to Armenia. Since 1991, Nagorno-Karabakh (also known as Artsakh), has existed as a de facto state, predominantly inhabited by ethnic Armenians. The latest conflict in the region erupted on Sept 19, 2023, with a military offensive by Azerbaijan leading to a Russian-mediated ceasefire on Sept 20. On Sept 28, authorities of the enclave made the formal decision to dissolve the state by the end of the year.

    1
    Subsequently, nearly the entire Nagorno-Karabakh population fled westward to Armenia, increasing the country's population of 2·8 million by more than 3% in the span of less than 1 week. Refugees with few belongings crammed in cars, buses, and trucks fled to pass through the Lachin Corridor on their journeys over multiple days.

    2

     The refugees have since been dispersed throughout the country wherever shelter was available (appendix).

    3

     Emergency medical care and supplies are being provided by the Armenian Government, non-governmental organisations, and international agencies, such as WHO, Doctors Without Borders, World Food Programme, and UNICEF. However, meeting the health needs of this vulnerable population disseminated throughout a country with scarce resources has proven arduously complex.

    The immediate health needs of the refugees are immense.

    3

     Before the exodus, people of Nagorno-Karabakh had been living under a punitive 9-month blockade, resulting in malnutrition and worsening health conditions due to scarcity of food, medicine, and vaccines.

    4

     During their exile, a fuel depot explosion led to hundreds of casualties among refugees.

    5

     Other factors contributing to medical needs include the suddenness of displacement, forfeiture of medical records, and loss of established longitudinal health-care providers.

    But as headlines fade and humanitarian priorities shift elsewhere, Nagorno-Karabakh refugees will continue to face challenges in accessing high-quality health care. The Armenian Government intends to integrate displaced people into the health-care system, providing them with the same care as their host communities. However, Armenia has a health-care infrastructure with scarce resources and of inadequate quality. Given this reality, it would be wise for the global health response—typically focused on the acute needs of the refugees, and sometimes guilty of setting up health programming in parallel to government efforts—to simultaneously strengthen local health services towards universal health coverage, improved primary care, and optimised outcomes. Addressing the urgent needs, such as infectious and chronic diseases and mental health and psychosocial factors (eg, disruption of social support, loss of homeland, or absence of employment), in an evidence-based manner with the aim of health-care system strengthening will build preparedness in a region with ongoing conflict.
    KH is an adviser to the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia; is a member of the Strategy and Operations Committee of Health Network for Armenia Foundation; and is a policy fellow of the Applied Policy Research Institute of Armenia. KG has served as a consultant for WHO and the World Bank. AD is a non-executive director of National Health Service England; is the chair of the Pre-emptive Health and Medicine Initiative at Flagship Pioneering; and is the chair of the Aurora Prize Selection Committee. SS is the associate director for Healthcare Outreach for the Promise Armenian Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles; is an adviser to the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia; is a member of the Strategy and Operations Committee of the Health Network for Armenia Foundation; and was the director of the Board of Trustees of City of Smile–USA. CM declares no competing interests.
    Editorial note: The Lancet Group takes a neutral position with respect to territorial claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
     

    Cyprus sends medical aid to Armenian refugees

    Cyprus Mail
    Jan 17 2024

    The ministry of foreign affairs and the civil defence announced on Wednesday that Cyprus has sent humanitarian aid to the people of Armenia.

    “Cyprus could not remain uninvolved […] after the recent dramatic events and the displacement of more than 100,000 people from the Nagorno-Karabakh region to Armenia as a result of the military enterprise of Azerbaijan,” the announcement said.

    Responding to a request by the EU civil protection mechanism, after completion of acceptance procedures by Armenia, the Republic of Cyprus on Tuesday sent €15,200 worth of medical and pharmaceutical supplies, donated by the state health services (Okypy) for the treatment of refugees who fled to Armenia.

    The shipment of the cargo was carried out by air in the afternoon, on a flight by Cyprus Airways which waived the transport cost.

    The ministry thanked the participants in the aid effort for their contribution.

    “We hope that our cooperation will be extended to other humanitarian actions and initiatives,” it said.

    Untying the Karabakh Knot

    Czech Rep. – Jan 16 2024

    With the South Caucasus sore spot now largely off the table, Armenia and Azerbaijan could ironically finally be on the brink of a historic peace deal.

    On 7 December 2023, Armenia and Azerbaijan surprised the international community by publishing a joint statement, which some commentators immediately hailed as a landmark deal. The two countries – at war over Nagorno-Karabakh multiple times in the past three decades – announced the mutual release of captured Armenian and Azerbaijani servicemen, raising hopes for a long-lasting peace agreement.

    After the bloody second Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020, which saw Azerbaijan victorious and thousands dead, Baku repeatedly declared the Karabakh dispute over. Consensus, however, remained elusive as neither the Armenian side nor Russian and Western stakeholders endorsed that approach.

    Azerbaijan’s mid-September 2023 military campaign against the self-declared breakaway state of Nagorno-Karabakh, which led to the surrender of the separatists and mass exodus of the region’s ethnic Armenians, changed everything. The international community – whether it liked it or not – came to accept that the Karabakh conflict had indeed reached its conclusion.

    Paradoxically, then, the outcome of the military offensive has laid the groundwork for a normalization process between Armenia and Azerbaijan: as the Karabakh issue had historically stood as a major stumbling block between the belligerent parties, its resolution opened an avenue for less fraught relations.

    The Sticking Points

    The negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan have in recent months been based on the basic principles that Baku proposed in 2022:

    • mutual, formal recognition of respect for the sovereignty, territorial integrity, inviolability of internationally recognized borders, and political independence of each state;
    • delimitation and demarcation of the state border (apparently according to the 1991 Almaty declaration establishing the Commonwealth of Independent States), and establishment of diplomatic relations;
    • unblocking of transportation and other communications, building other communications as appropriate, and establishing cooperation in other fields of mutual interest;
    • mutual confirmation of the absence of territorial claims against each other and acceptance of legally binding obligations not to raise such a claim in the future; and
    • obligation to refrain in their inter-state relations from undermining the other’s security, from threat or use of force both against political independence and territorial integrity, and in any other manner inconsistent with the UN Charter.

    Repeated statements have asserted that the parties have reached an agreement on the first three of the five points.

    An agreement encompassing these basic principles could serve as a foundational framework rather than an all-encompassing resolution, setting the stage for subsequent negotiations. In Baku, the urgency that dominated the pre-September atmosphere has waned as Azerbaijan perceives the 30-year conflict as resolved on its end. The prevailing viewpoint in Baku suggests that Armenia, in seeking peace and normalization, must take a proactive role. According to this logic, Yerevan currently needs a deal more than Baku does and needs to address the issues that may still serve as a source of concern and irritation for the latter.

    These issues include the fate of the Azerbaijani exclaves outside Karabakh currently under Armenian occupation. (Despite being collectively known as the exclave villages, only four of eight Azerbaijani villages are technically exclaves, since the remaining four have a land connection with mainland Azerbaijan.) While recognizing these 86.6 square kilometers as Azerbaijani territory, Armenia has yet to formulate a clear position and avoid ambiguity on these exclaves. A territorial swap could be an option, but the return of the exclave villages to Azerbaijan may not be realistic as Baku would need a land connection to control them. Moreover, a strategic roadway connecting Tbilisi and Yerevan passes through one of these settlements, presenting a potential stumbling block, as Armenia may be reluctant to relinquish control over the road.

    Complicating matters further, even though Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has declared several times that Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan, Armenia’s legislation still harbors territorial claims: the Armenian Declaration of State Sovereignty of 21 September 1990 references a joint decision in 1989 on the unification of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia. This legal backdrop has raised concerns in Azerbaijan, foreseeing scenarios in which the Armenian Constitutional Court could reject a peace agreement or a subsequent power shift in Yerevan might resurrect territorial claims. Azerbaijan finds the presence of such documents worrying, given the potential risks they pose, underscoring the fragility of the ongoing normalization process.

    In Baku it is widely felt that Armenia’s repeated attempts to insert a clause about the status of Karabakh or the rights or possibly return to Azerbaijan of the Karabakh Armenians have been a brake on the progress of the peace agreement. The Azerbaijani side has either rejected this formulation completely or demanded a mirror clause on the return of ethnic Azerbaijanis expelled from Armenia in the late 1980s, when the conflict first broke out.

    Another issue is simply the format of the ongoing talks along two major “tracks.” While the Western track had for some time achieved significant progress – and the EU may be considered to be the most honest broker in the 30-year history of Armenian-Azerbaijani talks – the engagement of France has, in the Azerbaijani perspective, yielded more harm than good. This negative perception stems from France’s supply of military equipment to Armenia, introducing a complicating factor that undermines the impartiality of the negotiation process. Furthermore, European and U.S. officials have made various statements that sounded or were perceived as anti-Azerbaijani in Baku, eroding Azerbaijani trust in this particular diplomatic avenue. With the stalemate in the Western track and given the reluctance of both Baku and Yerevan to achieve something substantial within the parallel Moscow framework, the Azerbaijani side has championed Georgia as an alternative facilitator – to save the process, it says. The idea is either direct Armenian-Azerbaijani talks with Georgia as a mediator or within an Armenian-Azerbaijani-Georgian regional cooperation framework.

    Armenian Fears

    Worth mentioning is the Zangezur Corridor, a main talking point in the international media after the surrender of the Karabakh separatists in September. Armenia, Western countries, and the international press warned about an “anticipated” Azerbaijani attack on southern Armenia to carve out this corridor between mainland Azerbaijan and the landlocked Nakhchivan exclave (with a further extension to Turkey). Those reports generated much surprise and confusion within Azerbaijani political circles. While such a military assault had never been seriously discussed in the Azerbaijani capital, Baku had floated the idea of an extraterritorial Zangezur Corridor as a reciprocal equivalent to the extraterritorial Lachin Corridor (preceding last year’s military campaign, Azerbaijan had installed a checkpoint along this road, which connected Armenia and Armenian-inhabited Karabakh, having secured effective control over the route).

    However, given that the military campaign removed the relevance of the Lachin Corridor, Azerbaijan has adjusted its position on Zangezur and is no longer insisting on its extraterritorial nature. Notably, Azerbaijan has now displayed a keen interest in any viable route bridging mainland Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan – even if it involves Armenian checkpoints. Despite Baku’s flexibility, Armenia has exhibited reluctance, compounded by opposition from Iran toward such a route. (Moreover, Azerbaijan, if intent on securing Zangezur by force, would not have engaged in discussions with Iran to explore an alternative route, dubbed the Araz Corridor.)

    In any case, it would be in the best interest of Azerbaijan to have both Armenian and Iranian routes to Nakhchivan to afford flexibility and reduce dependence on either side. In its turn, Armenia should be interested in revitalizing the Zangezur Corridor, which might fit into Yerevan’s much-advertised “Crossroads of Peace” initiative and could also provide Armenian leadership with strong leverage on Azerbaijan as the provider of a connection with Nakhchivan.

    Normalization with Azerbaijan might also be beneficial for Armenia in its pivot to the West. Armenia definitely needs Turkey not only for boosting bilateral political and economic relations, but also as a window to the West, but Yerevan must secure normalization with Baku first. As an Armenian expert recently complained to this author, “Yerevan is not surrounded by Baku and Ankara, but rather by two Bakus.” In other words, the road to an Armenian-Turkish rapprochement also goes via Azerbaijan.

    Azerbaijan could even directly support Armenia’s changing foreign policy orientation given the former’s history of extending a hand to those whom Russia has squeezed in the past. Baku has accumulated enormous experience in providing support, for instance, to Georgia during its 2008 war with Russia (electricity, gas, and cash); to Belarus during the 2009 “milk war” between Minsk and Moscow (cash to Belarus for repaying Russian loans); to Moldova (gas amid Gazprom’s recent pressure on Chisinau); and most recently to Ukraine (free fuel, humanitarian aid, demining equipment, and allegedly even weapons).

    How to Speed Up the Peace Process

    While Azerbaijan is apparently not in the rush it was prior to September 2023, a sense of urgency could reawaken to speed up the seemingly stalemated talks.

    The first factor that can accelerate the process is a possible Russian comeback to the region. With the theater of war in Ukraine at a relative standstill, this year could bring at least some sort of truce between Russia and Ukraine. In turn, the Kremlin might be able to switch its attention back to regions neglected over the past two years, especially in the Caucasus and Central Asia. Given the historical record of Russia’s leverage on Armenia and Azerbaijan via the Karabakh issue, it would be in the interests of both countries to end hostilities and simultaneously Russia’s Karabakh-based manipulation.

    An additional factor that may inject a sense of urgency is the conceivable spillover of the Middle Eastern conflict into the South Caucasus. The ongoing Israel-Hamas war – coupled with Iran’s active participation, in both the South Caucasus and the Middle East – introduces a variable that could significantly influence the regional landscape. As tensions in the Middle East have a historical tendency to reverberate in adjacent regions, the potential ramifications for the South Caucasus underscore the need for a proactive approach to addressing evolving dynamics and mitigating the risk of instability.

    Lastly, in November, Azerbaijan will host the COP29 UN climate change summit, one of the most prestigious and well-attended events globally. As the Azerbaijani leadership is investing both energy and finances into this massive event, the regime might see a peace deal and normalization with Armenia as a way to signal stability in the region and the country’s positive intentions.

    As noted, the Azerbaijani side may not be in a hurry to sign a peace agreement with Armenia both because it has the upper hand and has raised several concerns (or sources of irritation) that Armenia should, it believes, address first. At the same time, there should be no surprise if a peace deal happens seemingly out of the blue in the coming weeks. The authorities in Baku may even be considering a normalization process without any formal agreement by referring to other cases such as Japanese-Russian relations, which progressed after the Second World War without a formal peace treaty.

    Even the phrase “out of the blue” may not be quite correct – joint statements from Baku and Yerevan show they are continuing their communication through back channels and progress could come quickly. Indeed, despite the general tension, distrust, and unresolved issues between the two belligerent parties, 2024 could see the signing of a momentous peace deal with the prospect of reshaping the region for many years to come.

    Rusif Huseynov is a foreign affairs expert specializing in post-Soviet ethnic conflicts. He is the director of the Baku-based Topchubashov Center, an adjunct faculty member at ADA University, and a 2021 ReThink.CEE Fellow at the German Marshall Fund. He tweets at @RusifHuseynov2.