Armenia reported on Thursday progress in the latest round of negotiations with Azerbaijan on delineating the long border between the two states.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who made a telephone call to Russian President Vladimir Putin, offered his explanations concerning Yerevan's EU aspirations. The Russian leader gave his assessment of what was happening, TASS reported, citing the Kremlin press service.
Armenia’s government pointedly declined to react on Friday to the start of the trials in Azerbaijan of eight former leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh and eight other Karabakh Armenian prisoners which human rights activists in Yerevan condemned as a travesty of justice.
On the initiative of the Armenian side, Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, the Kremlin press service reported on January 17.
January 2025 may go down as Armenia’s geopolitical inflection point, a time when Yerevan decisively moved to shun its longtime protector Russia and pin its political and economic future on integration with Western institutions, thus scrambling the strategic balance in the Caucasus.
Moscow accused Washington of playing a destabilizing role in the Southern Caucasus on Tuesday as Armenia and the United States prepared to sign a strategic partnership agreement. "The US has never played a particularly stabilizing role in the Southern Caucasus,
Economy Minister Gevorg Papoyan has described as “vital” a large-scale gold mining project which the Armenian government helped to disrupt six years ago but is now trying to revive.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian telephoned Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday to discuss Armenia’s plans to strive to join the European Union which have prompted stern warnings from Moscow.
but that it was ready to resolve the issue in good faith YEREVAN, January 15. /TASS/. Armenia and Russia agreed that Moscow will reduce Yerevan’s debt, subtracting unshipped weapons that have ...
The population of Armenia may decrease by about 400,000 people by 2050, according to the World Population Review.
Armenia’s government backed kicking off the process for accession into the European Union, a move that could anger its traditional ally, Russia.
Among the main natural attractions are Lake Sevan, known as the "Sea of Armenia," the Debed Canyon with its historic monasteries, and Dilijan National Park, a green haven perfect for hiking.