Coming back again to the issue of peace, as I said, it is very important for our region. However, in order for us to be able to find that durable and stable peace, it should represent all of the interests in the region. It can't be dictated to Armenia what peace means, and we can't allow Azerbaijan to dictate its own terms. That's why we're holding the negotiations.
As I mentioned in my answer to the previous question, it's very important to address the root causes of the problem. You can't sign a peace agreement without mentioning the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. The issue is there. It doesn't matter how much Azerbaijan wants it to disappear from the international arena. Right now, what we're discussing is the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh and the rights and securities of the people in Nagorno-Karabakh.
If Azerbaijan is truly interested in peace, it wouldn't have the state-sponsored Armenophobia that we hear at the state level from Azerbaijan. It wouldn't torture and kill prisoners of war, desecrate the bodies of soldiers and civilians, and destroy Armenian cultural heritage. If this is the way it wants to have peace with Armenia, we have a problem.
The international community has a decisive voice and place in the south Caucasus. This is a very important region.
Canada again can be very active when it comes to the resolution of the conflict with its statesmen, with its involvement with the parties and with its involvement with Turkey. Turkey is a very important player in our region, as I said. It's a very negative player, unfortunately, despite the fact that we have another track of discussions with Turkey, trying to see how we can normalize relations with them. Unfortunately, I have to say that what we see is talks for the sake of talks. Nothing is moving.
We see from Turkey's side that there is no interest in pressuring Azerbaijan into being more constructive in the negotiating process.