ArmInfo.Armenia will continue cooperation with the European Union in such areas as intensifying political dialogue, humanitarian cooperation aimed primarily at overcoming the consequences of Azerbaijan's aggression against Artsakh in 2020, and resolving issues related to the withdrawal of Azerbaijani troops from the sovereign territory of Armenia.
On November 2, during the hearings in the commissions of the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia on the draft state budget of the country for 2023, Deputy Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia Paruyr Hovhannisyan stated this.
He noted that next year steps will be taken to deepen cooperation with various EU bodies and fully fulfill the obligations assumed, including assistance in the implementation of reform programs, as well as to expand the legal framework and overcome economic shocks. Next year, as noted by the Deputy Minister, it is planned to hold a meeting of the EU statutory bodies, including a meeting of the Armenia-EU Partnership Council, which will be held in Brussels, a meeting of the Trade Partnership Council in Yerevan.
Within the framework of inter-parliamentary cooperation, the Deputy Minister continued, it is also planned to continue meetings in the adopted formats, including the meeting of the Armenia-EU Inter- Parliamentary Cooperation Committee, the meeting of the Committees and the Bureau of the Euronest Parliamentary Assembly.
Within the framework of the Eastern Partnership program, in 2023, the EU will assist Armenia in the implementation of programs for the development of small and medium-sized businesses, the construction of the North-South highway, the introduction of innovative technologies, the strengthening of the Syunik region of the republic, the Green Yerevan program, etc. A new area for cooperation will be the development of partnerships within the framework of the EU monitoring mission on the borders of the country.
The Deputy Minister also informed about the continuation of the process of discussions on facilitating the visa regime between Armenia and the EU. The problem here rests on the post-COVID period and the Ukrainian-Russian crisis, in connection with which there are fears in the EU about a massive influx of migrants. A number of EU countries are taking an extremely cautious approach to the issue of facilitating the visa regime with Armenia. Nevertheless, as Hovhannisyan noted, this issue remains on the agenda. The Deputy Minister expressed hope for progress on this issue next year.
The Deputy Minister also noted that Armenia is ready to resolve issues related to the problem of frozen relations with Hungary, but additional steps are needed. He recalled that five Armenian prisoners of war were repatriated from Azerbaijan last year with the assistance of Hungary. After that, Budapest also took steps to help the school named after Gurgen Margaryan and provided Armenia with vaccines against COVID, and most recently, a renovated Armenian Catholic church opened in the Hungarian capital. "I think there is cautious optimism in this issue," said Paruyr Hovhannisyan.
To recall, since August 31, 2012, all official contacts between Armenia and Hungary have been frozen. The reason for Yerevan's diplomatic demarche was the extradition of Azerbaijani army officer Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan by Budapest. In 2004, in Budapest, on the basis of xenophobia, he brutally killed senior lieutenant of the Armenian army Gurgen Markaryan. Young officers studied English together at the Hungarian National Defense University as part of the NATO Partnership for Peace program. Safarov killed the sleeping Markaryan with an ax. On August 31, 2012, Ramil Safarov surrendered to the Azerbaijani side. Upon his arrival in Baku, he was pardoned by the decree of the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev.