In an interview with Correio Braziliense, one of the major daily newspapers published in the capital, Brasília, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan, touched upon ongoing processes with Turkey and Azerbaijan.
Regarding negotiations with Azerbaijan, Mirzoyan stated: “I can assure you, the entire world, and Azerbaijan that Armenia is fully committed to the peace agenda. We have no intention, no reason, or motivation to start another war and escalate the situation. There is positive news: the completion of negotiations and the draft peace treaty. But there is also worrying news. Yes, peace, based on what we are hearing from the Azeri side, may be at risk because of Azerbaijan.”
On negotiations with Turkey, Minister Mirzoyan said: “We have a very constructive dialogue with Turkey. Within this dialogue, there have been no preconditions set by either the Armenian or Turkish side. We have publicly stated that the goal of establishing diplomatic relations is the opening of the border between Turkey and Armenia. The border was closed by the Turkish side 34 years ago. We have made some tangible progress, such as lifting the ban on air cargo transport. We also established direct flights, among other confidence-building measures. We agreed that, in a first stage, the border could be opened for citizens of third countries and Armenian and Turkish citizens holding diplomatic passports. This agreement has not yet been implemented. What we hear from our Turkish colleagues is that they are restrained from fully opening Armenia’s border until the final normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Although there is no formal precondition, we have seen that they link Turkey-Armenia relations to Armenia-Azerbaijan relations. We believe that if we opened the border between Armenia and Turkey first, it could have a very positive impact on our relations with Azerbaijan.”
“Among the tangible measures achieved with Turkey, we have started, bilaterally, border infrastructure work. Armenian and Turkish experts have begun examining the situation of the railway linking Gyumri to Kars. There are processes underway.
“We believe that lasting peace in the South Caucasus also depends on humanitarian issues, such as investigating the whereabouts of missing persons and victims of forced disappearances. But we also still have prisoners in Baku who have gone through staged judicial processes. We believe that the immediate release of these prisoners could help establish lasting peace between the two peoples,” the minister added.
The interview was given during Minister Mirzoyan’s official visit to Brazil.

