All news

Armenia-Azerbaijan border delimitation commissions set to meet in late January

The commissions, led by the Deputy Prime Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, have met five times to date

YEREVAN, January 15. /TASS/. The next meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani commissions on border delimitation is to be held in late January, with the exact date and venue still being determined, Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan, chairman of the Armenian commission, said.

"The next meeting of the commissions on border delimitation will take place at the end of January, the exact date, time and venue are still to be negotiated," Grigoryan said, as quoted by Radio Svoboda (recognized as a foreign media outlet in Russia).

"According to preliminary agreements, the meeting will first consider the draft regulations on the cooperation of the commissions. They must clearly define the types of documents and important legal acts to be used in the joint work, as well as the latest topographic maps from the USSR period, made on proper legal grounds and issued by competent bodies. Any other similar issues must also be identified by the proper authorities," the deputy prime minister noted.

The commissions, led by the Deputy Prime Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, have met five times to date. The last meeting was held on November 30 on the border of the two countries.

Armenia and Azerbaijan are negotiating a peace treaty. One major obstacle has been the issue of demarcating the common section of the border. Yerevan insists that the Alma-Ata Declaration of 1991 should serve as the political basis for the delimitation of the border. Armenian authorities believe that the 1974-1990 maps of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the USSR should be used in this process.