Açiq mənbələrdən foto.
Senior Israeli diplomat called Hikmet Hajiyev
Baku/21.11.22/Turan: Today, Israeli Foreign Ministry Director General Alon Ushpitz had a telephone conversations with Hikmet Hajiyev, Assistant to the President of Azerbaijan for Foreign Policy, Israeli Ambassador to Baku George Dick wrote on Twitter.
Ushpitz welcomed Azerbaijan's decision to open an embassy in Israel.
Then Ushpitz and Hajiyeva discussed bilateral and regional issues. ----06B----
Politics
-
Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister, Jayhun Bayramov, dismissed the possibility of a "partial peace" with Armenia during a speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Saturday, in response to a more optimistic tone struck by Yerevan earlier in the week. His comments highlighted the stark contrast between the two countries' positions, underscoring the significant hurdles that remain to finalise a comprehensive peace agreement.
-
Fazil Gasimov, an economist who has been on a hunger strike for 107 days while in detention, is facing pressure to end his protest, Gasimov’s relatives said.
-
A year after the organized departure of the entire Armenian population from Nagorno-Karabakh, only 2.6% of the former Armenian residents of the region have obtained Armenian citizenship. According to the Armenian Migration Service, out of approximately 120,000 displaced individuals, only 3,226 people have received Armenian passports.
-
Azerbaijan and Saudi Arabia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding between the governments of Azerbaijan and Saudi Arabia regarding the mutual exemption from visa requirements for holders of diplomatic and service passports traveling for short-term visits. The document was signed by the foreign ministers of both countries, Jeyhun Bayramov and Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, on September 27 during a meeting at the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly. According to the press service of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, the meeting expressed satisfaction with the development of bilateral relations based on mutual respect for each other's legitimate interests.
Leave a review