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South Caucasus News

Ara Margaryan appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Armenia to Estonia – 1Lurer


Ara Margaryan appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Armenia to Estonia  1Lurer

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South Caucasus News

Azerbaijan: Re-election of President Aliyev – IPS Journal


Azerbaijan: Re-election of President Aliyev  IPS Journal

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South Caucasus News

Armenia PM: Azerbaijan raises uproar over our technico-military contracts but buys billions of dollars worth of weapons


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South Caucasus News

Aliyev Wins Snap Presidential Election


Executive Summary: 

  • Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev called for snap presidential elections to be held on February 7, citing the need for fresh elections following the restoration of the country’s territorial integrity over Karabakh.
  • Aliyev faced little competition as he is perceived as widely popular after playing a leading role in restoring Baku’s full sovereignty over Karabakh.
  • The president’s new term is expected to focus on the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process, opening the Zangezur Corridor, and recalibrating foreign policy—with a possible shift toward closer ties with Central Asia, the Persian Gulf region, and East Asia.

On February 7, Azerbaijan held early presidential elections that were initially scheduled for 2025, when the seven-year term of President Ilham Aliyev was supposed to end. The Azerbaijani government moved the date forward to December 2023, setting February 7 as the date for the early elections (Azertag, December 7). Numerous reasons have been speculated by observers both inside the country and abroad about the reasons behind this decision. One significant pattern that has emerged in this context is related to the fact that it was the third major election in a row in Azerbaijan that had been rescheduled to an earlier date after the 2018 presidential and 2020 parliamentary elections. 

This year, the decision to call the elections earlier took place in a specific context following the conflict in Karabakh in September 2023. This was particularly highlighted by Aliyev himself when he elaborated on the reasons for early elections on January 10 (President.az, January 10). Characterizing the restoration of the country’s territorial integrity as “the beginning of a new era” for Azerbaijan, he underscored it as the first primary reason for the snap elections. The second reason the President articulated is also related to this sentiment. “I thought that the first elections to be held across the entire territory of our country should be the presidential elections,” he said, adding that “If we were to hold this election on time, i.e., in April 2025, then municipal elections would be the first to be held. I thought that would not be right.” Celebrating the historical significance of the elections being the first to be held in the Karabakh region, Aliyev and his family voted in Khankandi in the Karabakh region (Apa.az, February 7).

Another reason Aliyev rescheduled the elections was to capitalize on his strong popularity in the country following the Karabakh conflict. His opponents in the elections, mainly the members of the parliament, did not have much popular support to challenge Aliyev. This reality probably affected the decision of some other opposition parties, including the Republican Alternative (REAL), not to join the race, leading Aliyev to have no strong competition.

On February 11, the Central Election Commission declared Aliyev emerged victorious, securing 92.12 percent of the votes (4,567,458) (Azertag, February 11). Other candidates, including other opposition parties, including REAL, congratulated Aliyev, with no domestic political group challenging the results. Following the elections, a series of world leaders, including President Charles Michel of the European Council, Chinese President Xi Jinping, and Russian President Vladimir Putin, congratulated Aliyev (President.az, February 8).

Aliyev’s renewed presidential term is expected to be dominated by a series of political and economic tasks and challenges. Above all, as he announced on January 10, in his interview with local TV channels, the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process would continue to top his government’s agenda (President.az, January 10). In early February, it was reported that analysts at Fitch Solutions (part of the Fitch Group) believe that Azerbaijan and Armenia may sign a peace treaty in the first half of 2024. “We think it highly likely that a peace deal will include provisions for greater Azeri control over the creation of the Zangezur corridor,” the assessment of the agency stated (Fitch Solutions, February 2024). A breakthrough in the talks over the Zangezur corridor is primarily seen as imperative to make a peace treaty possible (See EDM, January 24).

In foreign policy, the country will likely pivot more to its partners in Central Asia, the Gulf region, and East Asia. Following disagreements that appeared in relations between Baku and some Western capitals, exemplified by Azerbaijan’s departure from the Parliamentary Assembly of Council of Europe on January 24  and the warnings and calls for sanctions against Azerbaijan by some European officials, Baku may be more interested in diversification of its foreign policy (Azertag, January 27; Trend.az, January 31). Although  Aliyev has repeatedly denied any intention or preparations to invade southern Armenia, Baku was again warned by some European officials in January, including Josep Borrel, High Representative of the European Union, against any violation of Armenia’s territorial integrity (Azatutyun.am, January 23). This was coupled with Baku’s concerns against the activities of the European Union’s monitoring mission in Armenia, which Baku has accused of being used as a propaganda means against Azerbaijan. At the same time, the Armenia-Azerbaijan border has been unprecedently stable and peaceful since September 2023 (Qafqazinfo.az, February 12). These dynamics in the relations may bring about some fundamental policy changes in Azerbaijan’s foreign policy in the years to come under the new presidential term of Aliyev.

President Ilham Aliyev’s victory in the snap presidential elections on February 7 reflects the stability of his leadership. Azerbaijan has undergone significant geopolitical shifts, particularly with the resolution of the Karabakh conflict. The decision to hold early elections was strategically timed to capitalize on the momentum generated by the restoration of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. With an overwhelming majority of votes in his favor, Aliyev’s new term is poised to address various domestic and international challenges. The ongoing Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process remains a top priority, with hopes for a peace treaty in the near future. Additionally, Azerbaijan is expected to recalibrate its foreign policy, seeking closer ties with regional and Asian partners while navigating complex relationships with Western capitals.

https://jamestown.org/program/aliyev-wins-snap-presidential-election/?fbclid=IwAR2VsCVd9IuRtBFMqFQfrV8oHRxZPdszRjmA5gJMGyv_2-oCFHroZ1tCtbA


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South Caucasus News

Poll observers say Azerbaijan presidential vote marred by irregularities – Al Jazeera English


Poll observers say Azerbaijan presidential vote marred by irregularities  Al Jazeera English

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South Caucasus News

Intuitive Machines: US company makes historic Moon landing


An American company has made history by becoming the first commercial outfit to put a spacecraft on the Moon, the BBC reports.

Houston-based Intuitive Machines landed its Odysseus robot near the lunar south pole.

It took some minutes for controllers to establish that the craft was down, but eventually a signal was received.

“What we can confirm, without a doubt, is our equipment is on the surface of the Moon and we are transmitting,” flight director Tim Crain announced.

Staff at the company cheered and clapped at the news.

It was an important moment, not just for the commercial exploitation of space but for the US space programme in general.

Intuitive Machines has broken the United States’ half-century absence from the Moon’s surface. You have to go back to the last Apollo mission in 1972 for an occasion when American hardware nestled down gently in the lunar soil.


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South Caucasus News

Fossil reveals 240 million year-old ‘dragon’


Scientists have revealed a new, remarkably complete fossil – a 16ft (5m)-long aquatic reptile from the Triassic period, the BBC reports.

The creature dates back 240 million years and has been dubbed a “dragon” because of its extremely long neck.

It is called Dinocephalosaurus orientalis, a species that was originally identified back in 2003.

This spectacular new fossil has allowed scientists to see the full anatomy of this bizarre prehistoric beast.

Dr Nick Fraser, from National Museums Scotland, who was part of the international team that studied the fossil, said this was the first time scientists had been able to see it in full. He described it as “a very strange animal.”

“It had flipper-like limbs and its neck is longer than its body and tail combined,” he said.

The researcher speculated that a “long, bendy and flexible neck” might have provided a hunting advantage – allowing Dinocephalosaurus orientalis to search for food in crevices under the water.

The fossil was discovered in ancient limestone deposits in southern China.

“This discovery just adds to the weirdness of the Triassic,” Dr Fraser told BBC News. “And every time we look in these deposits, we find something new.”

The paper describing the animal is published in full in the academic journal Earth and Environmental Science: Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.


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South Caucasus News

Valencia fire: At least four killed as blaze engulfs apartment block in Spain


A massive fire has killed at least four people in a high-rise residential block in the Spanish city of Valencia, emergency services say, the BBC reports.

The blaze engulfed a 14-storey block in the Campanar neighborhood and spread to an adjoining building.

Firefighters were seen rescuing people from balconies, and 19 are believed to be still missing.

At least 14 people, including six firefighters and a young child, have been injured.

High winds fanned the flames, but there are also suspicions that highly flammable cladding enabled the fire to spread rapidly.

More than 20 fire crews tackled the blaze, and by early Friday the block was a giant fire-blackened shell. People were urged to stay away from the area.

The building contains 138 flats and was home to 450 residents, newspaper El Pais reported, citing the building’s manager.


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South Caucasus News

We will continue to fully support Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity: French Prime Minister – 1Lurer


We will continue to fully support Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity: French Prime Minister  1Lurer

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South Caucasus News

French, Armenian defense ministers hold talks in Yerevan


Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan has received his French colleague Sebastien Lecornu, who arrived in Yerevan on an official visit