A draft deal was agreed to end the bitter conflict for decades 4 months ago, but the timetable for its seal is still inaccurate.
Armenia and Azerbaijan leaders are holding peace talks in the United Arab Emirates after nearly four decades of conflict.
The meeting in Abu Dhabi on Thursday between Armenian Prime Minister Nicole Pashinan and Azerbaijani President, Ilham Aliyev, whose government affirmed, after the two countries ended The peace deal of the peace deal In March.
Southern Caucasus countries have fought a series of wars since the late eighties of the last century when Nagorno Karabakh, an area in Azerbaijan, was mostly ethnic population of arms at that time, from Azerbaijan with the support of Armenia.
Peace talks began after Azerbaijan Karabakh regained a thunderbolt attack in September 2023, prompting a large migration from all 100,000 Armenians, who fled to Armenia.
But the timetable for the stamp of the deal is still not certain.
Violations of the shooting off over the joint border of 1000 km (620 miles) ended after the announcement of the draft of the deal, although there were no violations recently reported.
In a potential stalled bloc of a deal, Azerbaijan said it wanted Armenia to change its constitution, which it says it makes implicit claims to Azerbaijani.
Yerevan denies this, but Pashinian has repeatedly emphasized in recent months – recently – that the Caucus Caucasus Charter must be updated.
Azerbaijan also requested a pass to transport through Armenia, and linked the largest part of its lands with Benchchivan, a Azerbaijani pocket that borders the ally of Baku, Turki.
The last meeting of Pashinyan and Laif in May was on the sidelines of the European Political Society Summit in Tirana, Albania.
In June, Pashinan was made A rare visit To Istanbul to hold talks with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a meeting that Armenia described as a “historic” step towards regional peace.
This week, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio expressed his hope for a quick peace agreement between the Caucasus neighbors.
The outbreak of hostilities between the two countries in the late eighties of the last century pushed mass expulsions to hundreds of thousands of Muslim Azeris from Armenia and Armenians, who are Christians, from Azerbaijan.
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