Azerbaijan dissatisfied with EU Monitoring Mission in Armenia Foreign Ministry summons EU delegation head
On 12 February 2024 the Ambassador of the European Union to the Republic of Azerbaijan, Peter Michalko, was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
During the meeting, a serious concern was reiterated with regard to the activities of the EU Monitoring Mission in Armenia (EUMA) that contradict initial agreements with respect to this mission and activities, the ministry told Caliber.Az.
It was noted that contrary to its declared purposes of contributing to stability in the region and confidence between Azerbaijan and Armenia, the mission is being widely exploited as an anti-Azerbaijani propaganda tool.
It was brought to the attention of the EU side that the Mission has essentially become an agent of “binoculars diplomacy” facilitating the visits of different European officials and unofficial delegations to the border areas. All such visits, without exception, are used for disseminating anti-Azerbaijani hate and replicating unfounded Azerbaijan-phobia.
Of particular concern is that such an intensification in “binocular diplomacy” happens at a time when there is an unprecedented calm situation along the border, and both Azerbaijan and Armenia have implemented serious confidence-building measures.
Moreover, the recent case of prevention of an attempt of illegal crossing through the areas of responsibility of the EUMA casts a serious shadow over the declared tasks of the Mission.
Such concerning actions by no means conform with the declared goals of EUMA of contributing to trust and confidence as a neutral actor.
The EU side was urged to take all necessary measures with a view to ensuring that EUMA deployed in the territory of Armenia act strictly as a neutral, civilian and unarmed mission in line with its declared mandate, and refrain from any activity that would target Azerbaijan’s sovereignty, territorial integrity or in any other manner affect its legitimate security interests.
The EU's two-year monitoring mission started operations on Armenia's border with Azerbaijan in February 2023. The EU Foreign Affairs Council agreed to increase the mission personnel from 138 to 209 staff members in December 2023.
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On February 12, Head of the EU Delegation to Azerbaijan Peter Michalko was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan.
At the meeting it was reiterated that the EU monitoring mission's activity in Armenia contradicts the preliminary agreements reached and causes serious concern, the ministry told Caliber.Az.
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