Will the Agreement Be Signed in Brussels? How Official Moscow Views This: 'Fact'
According to the newspaper 'Fact', Secretary of the Security Council Armen Grigoryan, who departed for Brussels yesterday, is scheduled to present details of the meeting between Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov that took place in Geneva on October 2, in addition to previously planned meetings with NATO officials. He is expected to outline the core issues discussed during that meeting.
Our source notes that Grigoryan will also inform European representatives about the ongoing work of the delimitation and demarcation commission. An informed source in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has reported that Tuomo Klaar, the EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia, who was recently in Yerevan, urged the Armenian side to have a finalized version of the 'peace agreement' ready by the end of October.
The newspaper has information that the Armenian-Azerbaijani 'peace agreement' is expected to be signed in Brussels during the first ten days of November. Interestingly, the paper’s source also conveys that official Moscow has already expressed its positive opinion on this matter. It is evident that, in the current situation, for Moscow, the delimitation process and specific negotiations around communications are more crucial than the escalation of tensions in the region.
For more details, see today’s issue of the newspaper.