Territorial claims against Azerbaijan that are embedded in the current Armenian Constitution continue to remain the only obstacle to further progress in the peace process beyween Baku and Yerevan, the Representative of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan on special assignments, Elchin Amirbayov, told Radio Liberty, according to Report.

“It’s not about doing it under pressure from Azerbaijan, but it’s about you answering one question: Do you want peace or do you want a possibility for a new confrontation with Azerbaijan?” Elchin Amirbayov said, “If they [the Armenian authorities] put it that way, I think a majority of Armenian people who would participate in that plebiscite or referendum, I’m sure that they would support peace.”

“We want to be reassured that the peace agreement is a kind of a solemn treaty that would render impossible any return to revanchism or to any territorial claims to Azerbaijan in the future as it had done in the past,” Amirbayov said.

“Territorial claims against Azerbaijan that are embedded in the current Armenian Constitution continue to remain the main, and I would say pretty much the only, obstacle to further progress in the peace process,” he added.

According to the representative of the President of Azerbaijan, one of the factors that currently facilitate negotiations is that both sides have agreed to resolve the most contentious of the remaining issues. Specifically, how to arrange the transportation routes that will connect the rest of Azerbaijan with its exclave Nakhchivan, that is, the issue of the Zangazur corridor.