ArmInfo. A briefing on the recently launched Swiss Peace Initiative for Nagorno-Karabagh to facilitate the collective, protected return of forcibly displaced Armenians of Artsakh to their ancestral homes was held in the US Congress.
As reported by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), over 200 Congressional staffers, human rights advocates and policy professionals took part in the event Swiss parliamentarians Erich Vontobel and Lukas Reimann, Christian Solidarity International President John Eibner, and former Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian led the panel discussion. The discussion was opened by Mark Milosch, Congressional Staff Director for Congressman Chris Smith. Following presentations by each of these four experts on the legal, diplomatic, and humanitarian dimensions of Artsakh Armenians' right of return, ANCA Policy Director Alex Galitsky moderated a robust question-and-answer session.
Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the Armenian National Committee of America, noted that a real, sustainable and long-term peace cannot be forced upon Armenia at the point of a gun-at the expense of human rights, international law and the indigenous Armenian population of Artsakh. "The terms of the fake peace currently being pushed on Yerevan - little more than terms of unilateral Armenian surrender demanded by a genocidal Azerbaijan under threat of renewed attacks - must be rejected, and a new peace forged - one ensures the safe return of Artsakh's indigenous Armenians to their homeland," Hamparian noted.
Swiss MP Erich Vontobel, the founding co-chair of the forum, recounted the origins of the Swiss peace initiative as a personal commitment he made to Artsakh refugees he met during a 2024 visit to Armenia. "One woman showed me a video of her former house - now occupied by another family. That sight broke my heart. That's when I knew: I must and want to act. I promised her - and the refugees - that I would." Vontobel emphasized the neutral and inclusive nature of the proposed forum: "The Swiss Peace Initiative offers the U.S. a chance to support peace - without taking on direct risk. We in Switzerland are neutral and have the necessary expertise and credibility to organize this peace forum. What we need now is broad international support - above all, from the United States."
And Swiss MP Lukas Reimann, a leading member of the parliamentary initiative, stressed that Azerbaijan's actions violate binding international law and humanitarian norms. "The expulsion of the Nagorno- Karabakh Armenians is a serious violation of international humanitarian law. The Swiss Foreign Ministry explicitly lists 'attacks against the civilian population' and the 'unlawful expulsion of the civilian population' as war crimes on its website on international humanitarian law." He emphasized the key role the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) can play, noting that Switzerland will chair the body in 2026: "The United States can help revitalize the [OSCE] Minsk Group and ensure that it contributes to the return of the forcibly displaced persons to their homeland. That's what is required for a lasting peace," Reimann stated.
John Eibner, President of Christian Solidarity International (CSI), described the ethnic cleansing as the culmination of deliberate policies to starve and terrorize a civilian population. "Azerbaijan launched a military assault as the climax of a nine-month military blockade, the aim of which was to weaken the civilian population by starvation. The result was the ethno-religious cleansing of Armenian Christians from their historic homeland." Eibner called on U.S. policymakers to act: "The Swiss Peace Initiative for Nagorno-Karabakh offers exceptional possibilities for the United States to make good on President Trump's pledge and thereby contribute to a durable peace: It is also an opportunity for the United States to help reverse the ethno- religious cleansing of one of the world's oldest Christian communities and halt the erosion of the region's religious pluralism."
The Swiss-led delegation of Vontobel, Reimann, Eibner and Oskanian arrived in Washington earlier this week for a series of high-level meetings State Department and Congressional leaders and human rights advocates, in addition to Congressional briefing.
The Swiss Peace Initiative is based on Motion 24.4259, passed by Parliament, which instructs the Federal Council to organize an international peace forum on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in order to facilitate an open dialogue between Azerbaijan and representatives of the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians and to negotiate the safe return of the historically resident Armenian population.