Gulf Today

Putin hails Armenian PM’S ‘courage’ in signing deal

-

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday hailed Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s “courage” in agreeing to a peace deal over Nagorno-karabakh that triggered a backlash against the leader at home.

Armenia signed a Russian-brokered accord with Azerbaijan on Nov.9 ater six weeks of heavy fighting over the breakaway region of Nagorno-karabakh.

Under the deal, Armenia ceded three districts around the ethnic Armenian enclave in addition to four others that Azerbaijan­i forces reclaimed during the fighting.

Speaking during a videoconfe­rence meeting of the leaders of the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty Organisati­on (CSTO), Putin called Pashinyan’s decisions surroundin­g the ending of the conflict “necessary” but “painful.”

“They required a lot of personal courage on the part of the prime minister,” Putin said.

“Our task now is to support both the prime minister and his team in order to ensure peace,” he added.

The Russian leader’s show of support for Pashinyan came as the Armenian prime minister faces pressure at home.

Since the announceme­nt of the peace deal — which leaves Karabakh’s future political status in limbo — protesters have regularly taken to the streets of the Armenian capital Yerevan.

Demonstrat­ors have branded Pashinyan a “traitor” for agreeing to the deal and have demanded his resignatio­n.

The Armenian authoritie­s last month said they hadthwarte­daplottoas­sassinatet­heprimemin­ister.

Pashinyan, whose wife and son were at the front during the conflict, has said the peace deal was Armenia’s only option and that it ensured Karabakh’s survival.

Swaths of territory in Nagorno-karabakh previously controlled by ethnic Armenians were handed over to Azerbaijan, whose forces had recaptured some areas which Baku lost in an earlier war in the 1990s.

Even though the disputed region lost swathes of territory, it will see its future guaranteed by nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepe­rs to be deployed for a renewable five-year mandate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain