Nikol Pashinyan (born 1 June 1975) has been the prime minister of Armenia since May 8, 2018. Prior to this he was an opposition politician, and from 2012-2018 he was a deputy of the national assembly.| Jamnews in English
During his press conference, the Armenian prime minister outlined his vision for relations with Azerbaijan, regional transport links, and ties with the EU and Russia.| Jamnews in English
In Armenia, these were seen as meeting Azerbaijan's demands. However, Baku still declared that the Armenian Prime Minister's proposals cannot be considered "evidence of good intentions."| Jamnews in English
Baku issued new hardline demands, while Yerevan responded promptly—peacefully, but without concessions.| Jamnews in English
According to political analyst Robert Gevondyan, extending the observers' mandate along the Azerbaijan border suggests Yerevan and Baku failed to agree on removing foreign presence.| Jamnews in English
It began in 2024 along Armenia's northern border and will continue there. Analyst Samvel Meliksetyan suggests that southern territories occupied by Azerbaijan in 2021–2022 will be addressed later.| Jamnews in English
Armenian Parliament ratified border delimitation regulations solely with votes of ruling majority MPs, as opposition boycotted the session.| Jamnews in English
In its first public report, Armenia’s foreign intelligence service states that large-scale military actions by Azerbaijan are unlikely, but border escalations remain possible| Jamnews in English
Everything about Armenia - Armenian news and analysis. Politics, economics, sport, stories, life and conflicts in armenia.| Jamnews in English