Turkish President Erdogan arrives in Azerbaijan on official visit [PHOTOS]

On November 8, the President of the Republic of Trkiye, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, arrived in the Republic of Azerbaijan for an official visit, Azernews reports.

A guard of honor was lined up at Heydar Aliyev International Airport to welcome the distinguished guest, with the national flags of both brotherly nations proudly waving.

President Erdogan was received by First Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan Yagub Eyyubov, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Samir Sharifov, Minister of National Defense of Trkiye Yasar Gler, and other high-ranking officials.

North Korea warns of ‘offensive action’ amid US-South Korea security talks

North Korea’s Defence Minister No Kwang Chol has threatened to take “more offensive action” as he condemned the United States’ security talks with South Korea on Saturday, Azernews reports, citing Tribune.

North Korea fired a ballistic missile towards the sea off its east coast on Friday, after denouncing US sanctions against North Korean entities allegedly involved in cyber-related money-laundering schemes.

South Korea’s Defence Ministry condemned the missile launch, while saying the North’s criticism of its meeting with the US was regrettable.

The US Indo-Pacific Command said that the launch “does not pose an immediate threat to US personnel or territory, or to our allies,’ but noted that it “highlights the destabilising impact” of North Korea’s actions.

Further, Chol criticised a recent visit by US and South Korean defence chiefs to the border between North and South Korea, as well as their subsequent security talks in Seoul.

He alleged they were conspiring to step up deterrence efforts towards the North, and to integrate their nuclear and conventional forces.

“This is a stark revelation and an unveiled intentional expression of their hostile nature to stand against the DPRK to the end,” Chol said, referring to the country’s formal name – the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had said that the core of the alliance with Seoul remains focused on deterring North Korea, although Washington will look at flexibility for US troops stationed in South Korea to operate against regional threats.

Chol also mentioned the visit of the US nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, George Washington, to Busan this week, following joint air drills with Seoul that had escalated tensions in the peninsula.

Although South Korea’s navy said the carrier’s visit was to replenish supplies and grant leave for the crew, Chol asserted, “We will show more offensive action against the enemies’ threat on the principle of ensuring security and defending peace by dint of powerful strength’.

Last week, just as US President Donald Trump and other leaders were set to convene in South Korea, North Korea test-fired cruise missiles to the west of the Korean peninsula.

During his visit, however, Trump repeated his willingness to sit down with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Though no meeting took place, Trump said he was willing to return to the region to meet Kim.

New residential complexes to be commissioned in Shusha by early 2027, Karimov says

New residential complexes are expected to be put into operation in the city of Shusha by the beginning of 2027.

Azernews reports that these remarks were made by Aydin Karimov, the Special Representative of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan in the Shusha region, in his statement to journalists on Victory Day.

According to Karimov, most of the construction and reconstruction works in Shusha will be completed next year.

“Work has begun on two residential complexes. The construction of the third residential complex will start in the next two months. A large-scale project consisting of about 45 buildings is currently underway in Shusha. We will gradually hand over these buildings to the residents of Shusha by early 2027,” he said.

President Ilham Aliyev, President of Trkiye, PM of Pakistan hold trilateral meeting [PHOTOS]

On November 8, President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, President of the Republic of Trkiye Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif held a trilateral meeting, Azernews reports.

Prime Minister of Pakistan Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif concludes visit to Azerbaijan [PHOTOS]

Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif, Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, completed his visit to Azerbaijan on November 8, Azernews reports.

A guard of honor was lined up in honor of the Pakistani Prime Minister at Heydar Aliyev International Airport decorated with the national flags of both countries.

Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif was seen off by Yagub Eyyubov, Azerbaijani First Deputy Prime Minister, Fariz Rzayev, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, and other officials.

President Ilham Aliyev: President of Trkiye Recep Tayyip Erdogan provided support to Azerbaijan from first hours of Second Garabagh War

‘President of the Republic of Trkiye Recep Tayyip Erdogan provided support to Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijani people, and the Azerbaijani Army from the first hours of the Second Garabagh War,’ President Ilham Aliyev said during his speech at the military parade dedicated to the fifth anniversary of the Victory in the Patriotic War, Azernews reports.

‘His political and moral support gave us strength and inspired us,’ the head of state added.

Azerbaijan ready to expand pragmatic cooperation with Nepal, Ambassador Huseynli says

Azerbaijan is determined to expand cooperation with Nepal in a number of important areas and exchange experiences in the fields of public administration and infrastructure development, Azernews reports.

This was stated in an article written by Azerbaijani Ambassador to Nepal Elchin Huseynli for Nepal Khabar.

The diplomat recalled that on November 8, Azerbaijan celebrates the fifth anniversary of its victory in the 44-day Patriotic War. ‘In just 44 days, more than 300 settlements were liberated, including the city of Shusha, the cradle of Azerbaijani culture,’ he noted.

The ambassador emphasized that immediately after the war, Azerbaijan began large-scale demining and reconstruction work in the liberated territories, focusing on creating safe conditions for the return of internally displaced persons within the framework of the Great Return program.

‘Despite its victory on the battlefield, already in November 2020, Azerbaijan came up with a peace initiative in the region and declared that its vision and approach are based on sustainable peacebuilding,’ the article states.

E. Huseynli highlighted that ‘intensive negotiations led to the historic meeting of the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia in Washington on August 8, 2025, where both sides signed a Joint Declaration with the participation of the US President.’

According to the ambassador, the new geopolitical reality created by Azerbaijan in the South Caucasus opens new opportunities for broader economic cooperation with South Asian countries, including Nepal.

He added that as a leading political and economic force in the region, ‘Azerbaijan has recently intensified bilateral relations with Nepal; for many years, the two countries have been successfully cooperating in multilateral formats such as the UN and the Non-Aligned Movement.’ He also reminded that Nepal was among the countries that officially welcomed the results of the Washington Agreements on August 8, 2025.

‘On this significant day – the fifth anniversary of the Victory, which laid the foundation for a new era of peace and prosperity – Azerbaijan is more than ever ready to expand pragmatic cooperation with Nepal, including in public administration, infrastructure development, institutional modernization, digital innovations, energy transition, education, and other areas of experience exchange,’ Huseynli concluded.

Oldest known Maya monument could be map of universe

A monumental complex built by the Maya around 3,000 years ago was modeled on a map of the cosmos, new fieldwork has revealed, according to Science Alert, Azernews reports, citing Azertag.

A detailed survey of the Aguada Fénix site reveals that not only was the monument significantly larger than initial surveys suggested – laid out in the shape of a cross with axes measuring 9 and 7.5 kilometers (5.6 and 4.7 miles) – but it was also designed as a cosmogram, an architecture symbolizing the cosmos.

What’s even more remarkable about the structure is that the site contains none of the trappings of social inequality, such as elite residences or sculptures of rulers.

This strongly implies that egalitarian cultures were capable of monumental building works without the application of coercive force through a stratified social hierarchy ruled by a king.

The discovery of Aguada Fénix by way of LIDAR surveys, in the Mexican state of Tabasco near the Gulf of Mexico, was fascinating for a number of reasons.

The first was its size; it was the largest Maya site ever found, even going by the more modest initial estimate of 1.4 kilometers along its longest axis. And it wasn’t hidden in the forest, as so many lost Mesoamerican, Central American, and South American structures are, but under a populated area. Plus, there was the aforementioned lack of evidence for social hierarchy.

Now, a team of archaeologists led by Takeshi Inomata of the University of Arizona has conducted additional LIDAR operations, fieldwork, and excavations. They discovered that Aguada Fénix is far more extensive and complex – not just in its physical scope, but also in what it can reveal about the people who built it between 1050 and 700 BCE.

“Along with the appeals of collective ceremonies, feasting, and the exchange of goods, the construction of a cosmogram, materializing the order of the Universe, likely provided a rationale for a large number of people to participate without coercive force,” the researchers write in their paper.

“The development of Aguada Fénix exemplifies the capabilities of human organization without prominent inequality, but it also hints at the challenges that earlier builders faced.”

The layout of the monument, the researchers found, is a sort of nested cross, with long axes leading to the monument’s hub. That hub, located on an artificial plateau, contains two nested cross-shaped pits at its center.

The long axes each consisted of a corridor and a pair of causeways, with the corridor dug into the ground and the causeways built up above ground on either side of it. The longest corridor, extending towards the northwest, measures 6.3 kilometers. The researchers speculate that these may have been used for ritual processions in and out of the ceremonial center of the monument.

Around the western axis, where the structure crosses Laguna Naranjito, the builders began work on a system of canals that may have reflected the ritual importance of water. These canals were left unfinished, suggesting that the builders ran into limitations, both in their skills and their ability to organize the construcIt’s the ceremonial center of Aguada Fénix on the Main Plateau that yielded some of the most fascinating treasures of the dig. Right at the center of the nested cross pits, the archaeologists found deposits of pigment in a special cache, placed in a directional order. Blue azurite pigment was placed at the north; green malachite to the east; and yellow ochre containing goethite to the south.

US and UN ease sanctions on Syrian officials amid Trump’s policy shift

The U.S. Treasury Department and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) have officially removed Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and Interior Minister Anas Khattab from the list of ‘Specially Designated Global Terrorists’ (SDGT) as part of President Donald Trump’s latest changes to Washington’s Syria policy, Azernews reports.

The move marks a significant recalibration of the U.S. stance toward Damascus.

In parallel, the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) adopted a resolution to lift certain sanctions previously imposed on al-Sharaa and several other individuals at the initiative of the United States. The resolution passed with 14 votes in favor and China abstaining, reflecting broad international support for the gradual normalization of relations with Syria.

The decision is viewed as a crucial step toward the international reintegration of the Syrian leadership, signaling a possible new phase in post-conflict diplomacy and regional engagement with Damascus.