BAKU, Oct 4 (AFP) - Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has turned down a European meeting in Spain with Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan this week, because of European support for Yerevan, a government official told AFP on Wednesday.

Pashinyan later said he would still go to the summit of the European Political Community (EPC) in Granada, saying it was a “shame” that the two leaders would not be able to sign a “turning point document” on the contested Karabakh region.

Two weeks ago, Aliyev launched a one-day offensive that saw his country regain control of Nagorno-Karabakh, the home of pro-Armenian separatists.

The talks were to take place on the sidelines of the European summit, under the mediation of France, Germany and the European Council.

“Azerbaijan did not consider it necessary to participate in negotiations in this format,” an Azerbaijani government official told AFP.

Aliyev would not attend because of “pro-Armenian statements by French officials... and statements on the supply of weapons and ammunition (to Yerevan), on military cooperation”, the official told AFP.

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said in Yerevan on Tuesday that Paris had agreed to deliver military equipment to Armenia, without elaborating.

The official said Aliyev’s decision was also influenced by “accusations made yesterday by EU Council President Charles Michel”.

Michel, who has mediated several meetings between the foes in recent years, criticised Baku’s use of military force.

The official also cited an “anti-Azerbaijani atmosphere” and said Baku had wanted the meeting to take place in Turkey, its ally, which welcomed the Karabakh offensive.

In Yerevan, Pashinyan told parliament Wednesday that he would still travel to Spain.

“We are going to Granada with a delegation from the foreign ministry and the Security Council,” he said.

“It is a shame that the meeting has not taken place,” he said.

“We were in a constructive and optimistic mood, because we thought that a turning point document could be signed,” he said. “Until this morning the likelihood of this was very high.”

Pashinyan said he hoped an agreement would be signed “at a good moment”.

Most of the Armenian population of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh republic has fled since Azerbaijan’s offensive, and the separatist government has agreed to dissolve.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a dispute over the mountainous region since the final days of the Soviet Union, going to war twice: in the 1990s and in 2020.

Photo from AFP