Azerbaijan Ready for Peace Talks with Armenia Amid New Tensions

03/29/2022

Azerbaijan has said it is ready for peace talks with Armenia, after Yerevan urged Baku to negotiate a comprehensive peace treaty amid new tensions over the long-contested enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. “If Armenia is serious about a peace agreement, then concrete steps have to be made. We repeat that Azerbaijan is ready for this,” the foreign ministry in Baku said in a statement on Tuesday. The ministry said Azerbaijan had proposed that the two countries hold peace talks a year ago. 

In 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war over Nagorno-Karabakh which killed more than 6,500 people. A ceasefire deal brokered by Russian President Vladimir Putin saw Armenia cede swaths of territory to Azerbaijan and Moscow deploy a peacekeeping contingent to the mountainous region. Last week, Yerevan and Moscow accused Baku of violating a ceasefire in the Russian contingent’s zone of responsibility. They accused Azerbaijan’s forces of capturing the village of Farukh in the Askeran region of Karabakh, where three Armenian soldiers were killed in a shoot-out last week. On Monday, Armenia’s security council accused Azerbaijan of “preparing the ground for fresh provocations and an offensive on Nagorno-Karabakh.” It urged Baku to “immediately start talks on a comprehensive peace treaty.” Armenia also demanded an investigation into the Russian peacekeeping contingent’s actions during Azerbaijan’s “incursion” and urged the Russian forces to take “concrete steps” to diffuse tensions. 

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