At UN meeting, Azerbaijan highlights Syrian Armenians’ settlement in Karabakh

  20 September 2016    Read: 2065
At UN meeting, Azerbaijan highlights Syrian Armenians’ settlement in Karabakh
Armenia, abusing the ongoing migrant and refugee crisis, continues to settle Syrian Armenians in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan, said Chief of Azerbaijan’s State Migration Service (SBS) Firudin Nabiyev in New York Sept. 19.
He made the remarks at the UN General Assembly high-level meeting on addressing large movements of refugees and migrants.

This is a gross violation of international law and, above all, the Fourth Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their Additional Protocols, Nabiyev added.

He stressed that Azerbaijan has faced the problem of internally displaced persons as a result of the occupation of its lands by Armenia.

Over the last twenty years, the Azerbaijani government has spent about six billion dollars (USD) to address the social problems of IDPs, the SBS chief added.

The Azerbaijani government’s efforts to solve the IDP problem are highly appreciated by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, the International Organization for Migration and other international organizations, said Nabiyev.

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict entered its modern phase when the Armenian SRR made territorial claims against the Azerbaijani SSR in 1988.

A fierce war broke out between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan. As a result of the war, Armenian armed forces occupied some 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory which includes Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent districts (Lachin, Kalbajar, Aghdam, Fuzuli, Jabrayil, Gubadli and Zangilan), and over a million Azerbaijanis became refugees and internally displaced people.

The military operations finally came to an end when Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in Bishkek in 1994.

Dealing with the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is the OSCE Minsk Group, which was created after the meeting of the CSCE (OSCE after the Budapest summit held in Dec.1994) Ministerial Council in Helsinki on 24 March 1992. The Group’s members include Azerbaijan, Armenia, Russia, the United States, France, Italy, Germany, Turkey, Belarus, Finland and Sweden.

Besides, the OSCE Minsk Group has a co-chairmanship institution, comprised of Russian, the US and French co-chairs, which began operating in 1996.

Resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884 of the UN Security Council, which were passed in short intervals in 1993, and other resolutions adopted by the UN General Assembly, PACE, OSCE, OIC, and other organizations require Armenia to unconditionally withdraw its troops from Nagorno-Karabakh.

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