PM Pashinyan hints at unilateral handover of four villages to Azerbaijan to avert war

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has hinted that Armenia might return control of four abandoned villages to Azerbaijan in a unilateral handover of territory.
During a visit to the northern Tavush Province on Monday, Pashinyan said that the return of the villages to Azerbaijan could prevent war.
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the outbreak of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in the early 1990s, several areas along the border of both Armenia and Azerbaijan fell under the control of the opposing side. This included the Azerbaijani villages of Baghanis Ayrym, Ashagi Eskipara, Kheyrimli, and Gizilhajili, which remain occupied by Armenia.
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Azerbaijan subsequently took control of large swathes of territory during offensives into southern Armenia in 2021 and 2022.
The issue of the ‘four villages’ has become a frequent part of the Azerbaijani government’s rhetoric on the ongoing peace talks, with officials suggesting they would take the villages by force if they were not handed over unilaterally.
Pashinyan was visiting areas near the border with Azerbaijan around the villages that could be handed over. He reiterated that the delimitation with Azerbaijan could begin in Tavush, in the areas between the villages of Baghanis and Berkaber.
Last week, Pashinyan also stated that the four villages had never been de jure in the territory of Armenia.
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He also noted that one of the main roads connecting Armenia to Georgia runs through one of the Azerbaijani villages under its control, and that Armenia should rebuild infrastructure in the area ‘in the near future’.
Pashinyan’s statements were met with some controversy in Armenia, with former defence minister Seyran Ohanyan warning against a handover of the villages because it would advance Azerbaijani positions. He said that the road leading to Georgia through one of the villages was of ‘extreme importance’.
‘In other words, there will be obstacles on the way from Iran to Armenia, Georgia, and Russia’, Ohanyan told RFE/RL.
In response to Pashinyan’s statements about a potential renewal of hostilities, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Maria Zakharova blamed the West.
‘What did the new European Union, NATO, and Washington curators do? Please note: this statement is in no way related to Russia. This is the exclusive competence of the current authorities in Yerevan and the result of their consultations with Westerners,’ wrote Zakharova on Telegram.