Baku and Yerevan have failed to reach an agreement on border demarcation since last year’s war.
Azerbaijan has offered Armenia to start bilateral political discussions on demarcation and delimitation of the borders amidst the cross-border tension that has been prevalent since last year’s war.
The proposal was voiced by Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov who said that he expected positive reaction from Armenia.
Bayramov said that Azerbaijan has repeatedly expressed its willingness to normalize ties with Armenia since restoring its territorial integrity in the war in autumn 2020.
“There is no alternative to building good neighborly relations on this basis to ensure long-term peace and stability in the region. There is an unprecedented opportunity to build such a relationship through the consistent implementation of the trilateral statement signed by the leaders of both sides,” Bayramov said while addressing the 43rd online meeting of the Council of BSEC foreign ministers on June 30.
Speaking about anti-Azerbaijan hate speech in Armenian official cirlces, Bayramov said that this behavior threatens the fragile normalization process.
He also called on Armenia Armenia to “finally fulfill its obligations under international humanitarian law, as well as the tripartite declaration, and submit maps of mined areas to prevent further human suffering.”
Azerbaijan has repeatedly called on Armenia to start negotiations to unblock regional economic and communication ties and to work on peace-building process.
Ilham Aliyev on June 26 said that the Nagorno-Karababakh conflict no longer existed and that said that Armenia must start determining borders with Azerbaijan.
The situation on the border has been tense since the end of last year’s war that saw Azerbaijan liberate most of Nagorno-Karabkah region and the surrounding regions from the three decades of occupation. The two countries have not agreed on the demarcation of their joint border since they gained independence in the early 1990s.