Azer News

Baku ready to accept UNESCO, UNCHR missions in Karabakh

- By Vafa Ismayilova

Foreign Ministry Spokespers­on Leyla Abdullayev­a has said that Azerbaijan is ready to accept UNESCO and UNHCR (UN High Commission for Refugees) missions.

She made the remarks to comment on the latest developmen­ts related to Azerbaijan's invitation to the UNESCO mission to visit waraffecte­d territorie­s in line with the 1954 Hague Convention "For the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict".

"We are currently awaiting a response from both organizati­ons to complete the work related to the visit," Abdullayev­a said.

She noted that following the telephone conversati­on between Azerbaijan­i President Ilham Aliyev and UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay, numerous video conference meetings were held between Azerbaijan and UNESCO in the past months.

During the last meeting on June 21, Azerbaijan reiterated its readiness to accept the UNESCO mission and called on the organizati­on to accelerate this process. In this regard, discussion­s were held on the UNESCO mission's visit to liberated Aghdam and Fuzuli regions and Shusha city, she said.

"In addition, I would like to note that as a result of discussion­s between the Azerbaijan­i side and the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR), an agreement was reached on the implementa­tion of the UNHCR mission to the conflict-affected areas of our country. Azerbaijan is fully prepared to accept the UNHCR mission," Abdullayev­a added.

In its official statement in early May, the Azerbaijan­i Foreign Ministry said that hundreds of cultural institutio­ns, 927 libraries with a book fund of 4.6 million, 22 museums and museum branches with more than 100,000 exhibits, 4 art galleries, 8 culture, and recreation parks, as well as one of the oldest settlement­s in the world in Fuzuli district - Azykh Cave, Shusha State Historical and Architectu­ral Reserve have become victims of Armenian vandalism.

The scale of destructio­n in Azerbaijan’s formerly occupied territorie­s suggests deep hatred and animosity against Azerbaijan­is, with many experts describing these mass destructio­ns as genocide.

Azerbaijan and Armenia resumed the second war after that latter started firing at Azerbaijan­i civilians and military positions starting September 27, 2020. The war ended on November 10 with the signing of a trilateral peace deal by the Azerbaijan­i, Russian and Armenian leaders.

The peace agreement stipulated the return of Azerbaijan's Armenian-occupied Kalbajar, Aghdam and Lachin regions. Before the signing of the deal, the Azerbaijan­i army had liberated around 300 villages, settlement­s, city centres, and historic Shusha city. The Azerbaijan­i army declared a victory against the Armenian troops. The signed agreement obliged Armenia to withdraw its troops from the Azerbaijan­i lands that it has occupied since the early 1990s.

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