Arab News

Armenian foreign minister resigns after unpopular Karabakh cease-fire

- Reuters

Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakany­an resigned from his post on Monday in a sign of political fallout in the ex-Soviet republic after a cease-fire in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that locked in territoria­l gains for Azerbaijan.

Mnatsakany­an, whose departure was announced by the ministry’s spokeswoma­n on its Facebook page, had held the position since May 2018.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s government has faced a popular backlash over the ceasefire accord that ended six weeks of fighting, with thousands of protesters last week demanding he resign.

On Monday, hundreds of protesters rallied in the capital Yerevan’s central Freedom Square. The cease-fire signed by leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia on Nov. 10 halted military action in and around NagornoKar­abakh, an enclave internatio­nally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but populated by ethnic Armenians. Some 2,000 Russian peacekeepi­ng troops are now being deployed to the region.

Mnatsakany­an met Azeri counterpar­t Jeyhun Bayramov three times in the past month and a half in search of a ceasefire arrangemen­t, but each effort quickly broke down.

For over 25 years until fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh resumed on Sept. 27, ethnic Armenians held military control over the entire mountainou­s pocket and substantia­l swathes of Azeri territory ringing it. But when the guns fell silent, they had lost much of the enclave itself — including its second city Shushi, which Azeris call Shusha — as well as adjoining terrain.

Pashinyan said on Monday the war could have been avoided if Armenia had voluntaril­y ceded control of seven regions surroundin­g Nagorno-Karabakh as well as Shushi. “But we took up the challenge of war,” he told a news conference.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Anna Naghdalyan wrote on Facebook shortly afterwards that giving up Shushi was never on the agenda at any stage of negotiatio­ns between the sides.

Pashinyan said the road through the Lachin region that connects Nagorno Karabakh with Armenian state territory would be reopened later on Monday, and that many displaced residents of the enclave were returning to their homes. Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone call with French counterpar­t Emmanuel Macron on Monday to discuss the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Kremlin said. The two leaders said the situation in the South Caucasus region had generally stabilized and that it was time to address humanitari­an issues, including the return of refugees and the preservati­on of Christian churches and monasterie­s.

 ?? AP ?? Ethnic Armenians look out from a bus returning to Stepanaker­t on Monday.
AP Ethnic Armenians look out from a bus returning to Stepanaker­t on Monday.

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