BAKU: Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has agreed to a Russian proposal to hold talks in Moscow on May 25 with the president of its historic rival Azerbaijan.
The negotiations will take place as tensions rise between the Caucasus neighbours, who have fought two wars over disputed territory and who often see deadly clashes along their volatile border.
Locked in a decades-long territorial conflict, Baku and Yerevan are negotiating a peace agreement with mediation from the European Union and United States, whose diplomatic engagement in the Caucasus has irked traditional regional power broker Russia.
“We received a proposal from Russia to hold a trilateral meeting at the highest level under the mediation of the president of Russia on May 25. We have accepted that proposal,” Pashinyan told his cabinet meeting in Yerevan on Thursday.
On Friday, foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan are set to hold talks in Moscow hosted by their Russian counterpart.
Baku and Yerevan fought two wars – in 2020 and in the 1990s – for control of Azerbaijan’s mostly Armenian-populated region of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Six weeks of hostilities in autumn 2020 ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire that saw Armenia cede swaths of territory it had controlled for decades.
Yerevan has grown increasingly frustrated over what it calls Moscow’s failure to protect Armenia in the face of military threats from Azerbaijan. –Agencies