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South Caucasus News

President Ilham Aliyev approves law on state budget for 2024 – Trend News Agency


President Ilham Aliyev approves law on state budget for 2024  Trend News Agency

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South Caucasus News

Yerevan City Council starts meeting after quorum ensured



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South Caucasus News

Armenian Foreign Minister extends condolences on death of former Ambassador of Dominican Republic



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South Caucasus News

Fostering media literacy may tackle issues with handling digital technologies


The ability to recognize different types of media and comprehend the messages they convey is referred to as media literacy.

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South Caucasus News

Azercosmos receives award of international Tier IV certificate


The teleport of the Space Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan (Azercosmos) under the Ministry of Digital Development and Transport of Azerbaijan has renewed the Tier 4 compliance certificate of the World Teleport Association – WTA, Azernews reports.

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South Caucasus News

Indonesian youth organisations support ICYF-ERC’s declaration on Rabbani


The Indonesian National Youth Council supported the Eurasian Regional Centre of Islamic Cooperation Youth Forum’s (ICYF-ERC) statement, condemning the illegal detention of the leader of CAGE, NGO Mohammed Rabbani, as a result of which he wasn’t permitted to participate in the “Neocolonialism: Human Rights, Peace, and Security” international conference.

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South Caucasus News

Agency alerts consumers to be careful when reading labels of sugary foods


The Food Security Agency of Azerbaijan (AFSA) has urged consumers to be vigilant when buying products containing sugar, Azernews reports.

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South Caucasus News

National Television Festival of Sports Films & Programs announces its terms and requirements


Launched by the National Olympic Committee, National Television Festival of Sports Films and Programs has started its work in December, 2023, Azernews reports.

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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Azerbaijani MP: Separatists, Armenian rule fooled Karabakh’s Armenians for decades


The expert platform Baku Network has aired the latest episode of the analytical video project “Dialogue with Tofig Abbasov”, according to Azerbaijan in Focus, reporting Trend.

Azerbaijani member of Milli Majlis (parliament) Elnur Allahverdiyev was the guest of the program.

Allahverdiyev stated that for decades, Armenian citizens of Karabakh had been duped by separatists and the Armenian government.

“They forced people to accept lies. The Armenians who live in Karabakh don’t understand why they left. The entire globe is aware that we are prepared to welcome them. The Armenian government wants to use the former residents solely for the purpose of receiving a monthly remuneration,” Allahverdiyev stated.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his government, according to the MP, require subsidies as soon as feasible.

“They need to get subsidies from whoever they can get and as much as they can, for they can no longer get subsidies solely from the West and by cutting political ties with Russia or vice versa,” he went on to say.

According to the MP, the West does not desire peace in the South Caucasus and does not support the “3+3” model (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, Türkiye and Russia).

“They are currently drowning in their disarray and require new instability in other nations so that their internal difficulties do not prevent them from remaining in power,” he added.

The post Azerbaijani MP: Separatists, Armenian rule fooled Karabakh’s Armenians for decades appeared first on Azerbaijan In Focus.


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Azerbaijan says peace deal with Armenia ‘won’t solve everything’


Signing a peace treaty with Armenia doesn’t mean every problem will be resolved, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said Monday as the South Caucasus rivals struggle to thrash out an agreement for their decadeslong dispute, according to Azerbaijan in Focus, reporting Daily Sabah.

“The peace process does not depend on the wishes of one party. It is important that both parties take corresponding steps here,” Bayramov told a television interview in his country, local media reported.

“After the restoration of full sovereignty of Azerbaijan, we are closely following the messages of the political leadership of Armenia,” Bayramov noted.

Acknowledging “positive signs” from Yerevan in recent months, he said Baku expects “concrete steps” toward peace.

According to the minister, Azerbaijan is the party behind all important initiatives related to the peace treaty, which will be based on mutual recognition of territorial integrity.

Bayramov informed that Baku had received Armenia’s next package of proposals for the peace treaty in November and sent back its response to Yerevan after working on it for a month.

He believes the respective meetings will take place in 2024 as the process continues.

“Azerbaijan has a realistic and optimistic outlook on this issue. But when we talk about the peace treaty, we must understand that it will not resolve everything 100%,” Bayramov said. “Such a document will constitute a foundation and minimum conditions in future negotiations for normal neighborly relations between two nations.”

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan recently said it was possible to sign a peace agreement with Azerbaijan in the near future if Baku approves the principles agreed between the leaders of the two countries.

Earlier this month, Baku and Yerevan said in a joint statement they had struck an agreement on taking confidence-building measures and normalizing relations following bilateral talks.

As a sign of goodwill, the pair agreed on a prisoner swap, as well. Azerbaijan released 32 Armenians, mostly captured in late 2020, while Armenia handed over two Azerbaijani soldiers held since April 2023.

The pair also discussed the withdrawal of troops from their shared border but no concrete decision followed.

The South Caucasus neighbors have been locked in a decadeslong conflict over the control of the Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan reclaimed after a lightning operation against illegal separatists in September.

Azerbaijan, with Türkiye lending its support, liberated most of the Karabakh region from Armenian occupation during 44 days of clashes in the fall of 2020, which ended with a Russian-brokered peace agreement, opening the door to normalization.

Azerbaijan sent troops to Karabakh on Sept. 19, and after just one day of fighting, Armenian separatist forces aided down arms and agreed to reintegrate with Baku.

Since peace talks – mediated separately by the European Union, the United States and Russia – have seen little progress, the neighbors have been focusing on their bilateral efforts for a treaty.

The post Azerbaijan says peace deal with Armenia ‘won’t solve everything’ appeared first on Azerbaijan In Focus.