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Armenia, Azerbaijan begin marking border amid territorial conflict
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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan begin marking border amid territorial conflict

Armenia, Azerbaijan begin marking border amid territorial conflict

FP Staff • April 23, 2024, 17:40:48 IST
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Nikol Pashinyan, the prime minister of Armenia, granted Baku’s request last month to restore four frontier villages that were a part of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era

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Armenia, Azerbaijan begin marking border amid territorial conflict
The inhabitants of neighboring Armenian villages protested last week when the two nations reaffirmed their intention to move forward with border delimitation in the region using maps from the Soviet era Image Courtesy AFP

As part of their efforts to normalize relations after decades of hostilities over territory, Armenia and Azerbaijan declared on Tuesday that they had begun work on mending their border.

Nikol Pashinyan, the prime minister of Armenia, granted Baku’s request last month to restore four frontier villages that were a part of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era.

The inhabitants of neighboring Armenian villages protested last week when the two nations reaffirmed their intention to move forward with border delimitation in the region using maps from the Soviet era.

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On Tuesday, the two countries’ interior ministries announced the beginning of delimitation works on the ground.

Azerbaijan said expert groups are conducting “clarification of coordinates based on geodesic study of the terrain,” while Armenia ruled out “the transfer of any parts of Armenia’s sovereign territory” to Baku as a result of the delimitation.

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Fresh rallies erupted in Armenia following the announcement.

Dozens of protesters blocked the crucial Armenia-Georgia highway at several points, including near Lake Sevan and the town of Noyemberyan, close to the border with Azerbaijan, Armenian media reported.

The four abandoned settlements which are to be returned to Azerbaijan – Lower Askipara, Baghanis Ayrum, Kheirimly, and Gizilhajili – were taken over by Armenian forces in the 1990s, forcing their ethnic Azerbaijani residents to flee.

The residents of nearby Armenian villages fear they could end up isolated from the rest of the country and some houses could fall into territory controlled by Azerbaijan.

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The area has strategic importance for landlocked Armenia.

Several small sections of the highway to Georgia – vital for the country’s foreign trade – could end up in the territory to be handed back to Azerbaijan.

The delimited border will also run close to a major Russian gas pipeline, and the area has advantageous military positions.

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Pashinyan has insisted on the need to resolve remaining border disputes with Azerbaijan “to avoid a new war.”

On Saturday, he said Russian border guards – deployed in the area since 1992 – will be replaced by Armenian servicemen.

“Russian border guards will withdraw from the area and border guards of Armenia and Azerbaijan will be cooperating to guard the state border on their own.”

He also called border delimitation a “significant change on the ground” as the two countries “now have a border and not a line of contact – which is a sign of peace.”

Last autumn, Azerbaijani troops recaptured the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region from Armenian separatists in a lightning offensive that effectively ended a bloody three-decade standoff between the Caucasus neighbours over control of the mountainous region.

While both Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev say a wider peace agreement is within their reach, lingering territorial disputes pose a constant threat of a fresh flareup.

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