Armenia and Georgia have no unsolvable problems- Nalbandian
25.03.2016,
17:50
Armenia and Georgia have no unsolvable problems, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said today at a joint press conference with his Georgian counterpart Mikheil Janelidze in Yerevan.

YEREVAN, March 25. /ARKA/. Armenia and Georgia have no unsolvable problems, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said today at a joint press conference with his Georgian counterpart Mikheil Janelidze in Yerevan.
"Our relations are based on mutual trust and have been tested by time," said Nalbandian. Nalbandian said also that Mikheil Janelidze was the first high-ranking foreign official to visit Armenian foreign ministry's new building after relocation in the beginning of the year.
"The governments of the two countries have established close relationships. To say that relations between Armenia and Georgia are neighborly is to say very little, and it is no coincidence, as we have lived side by side for thousands of years," Nalbandian said.
According to him, the rich legal framework including more than 80 documents is a good basis for expanding cooperation. He said they have discussed a wide range of bilateral and regional issues.
"We continue to work on the preservation of Armenian cultural heritage in Georgia and the re-consecration ceremony of Armenian Surb Gevorg Church in Tbilisi at the end of October 2015, attended by Armenian president and the head of the Armenian Church is a vivid evidence of it", said Nalbandian.
Mikheil Janelidze in turn said relations between Tbilisi and Yerevan are actively developing, despite their different foreign policy vectors.-0-
"Our relations are based on mutual trust and have been tested by time," said Nalbandian. Nalbandian said also that Mikheil Janelidze was the first high-ranking foreign official to visit Armenian foreign ministry's new building after relocation in the beginning of the year.
"The governments of the two countries have established close relationships. To say that relations between Armenia and Georgia are neighborly is to say very little, and it is no coincidence, as we have lived side by side for thousands of years," Nalbandian said.
According to him, the rich legal framework including more than 80 documents is a good basis for expanding cooperation. He said they have discussed a wide range of bilateral and regional issues.
"We continue to work on the preservation of Armenian cultural heritage in Georgia and the re-consecration ceremony of Armenian Surb Gevorg Church in Tbilisi at the end of October 2015, attended by Armenian president and the head of the Armenian Church is a vivid evidence of it", said Nalbandian.
Mikheil Janelidze in turn said relations between Tbilisi and Yerevan are actively developing, despite their different foreign policy vectors.-0-