Azerbaijan ‘strategically important’ for EU’s energy independence: Hungarian premier
Without Azerbaijan, EU would not be able to cut dependence on Russian fossil fuels, says Viktor Orban
By Agnes Szucs
BRUSSELS (AA) - Azerbaijan is “strategically important” to maintain the EU’s energy independence, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Friday.
On the way to the informal meeting of EU leaders in the Spanish city of Granada, Orban underlined that “Azerbaijan is a key country, without Azerbaijan we cannot have energy independence.”
He said that without Azerbaijan’s gas supply, the EU would not be able to cut its dependence on Russian fossil fuels.
For his part, Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, told reporters that he invited leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to hold talks in Brussels later in October and that both of them have accepted the invitation.
Michel vowed to “work very hard to make progress in the field of the normalization between Azerbaijan and Armenia.”
He stressed that the EU “has no hidden agenda” when it mediates between the two countries.
The EU wants to work for a “prosperous and stable” South Caucasus and will use all the diplomatic tools “to encourage both leaders to make an agreement” on the normalization of the relationship.
The agreement must be based on the mutual recognition of each other’s territorial integrity and sovereignty, Michel added.
On the sidelines of the summit of the European Political Community, a pan-European platform with the participation of over 40 leaders, Michel held a meeting on Wednesday with leaders from Armenia, Germany, and France to discuss the latest developments in the South Caucasus.
Azerbaijan was also invited but President Ilham Aliyev decided not to attend the meeting in protest due to the French government’s recent actions.
Hikmat Hajiyev, foreign policy advisor of the Azerbaijani president, said Baku had proposed the participation of Türkiye and Spain in a planning meeting, but that proposal was rejected by France.
Hajiyev underlined that Azerbaijan is still open to talks in Brussels, in the format of the EU, Azerbaijan and Armenia, which would be facilitated by Michel.
“At the same time, Azerbaijan supports direct and bilateral dialogue and negotiations on the process of normalization of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia and the peace treaty talks,” he wrote on social media.
Azerbaijan regained full control over its territory of Karabakh last month after taking counter-terrorism actions, which resulted in the surrender of illegal armed groups, ending a decades-long conflict.
Authorities have repeatedly said that they will protect the rights and ensure the security of the Armenian residents in Karabakh, in accordance with Azerbaijan's law.
Michel, who presides over meetings of EU leaders and represents the bloc in international affairs, has made significant diplomatic efforts for reconciliation between Armenia and Azerbaijan following their conflict in 2020.
Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.
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