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Iranian President Visits Azerbaijan, Calls For Closer Ties

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  • Iranian President Visits Azerbaijan, Calls For Closer Ties

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Aug 6 2004

    Iran/Azerbaijan: Iranian President Visits Azerbaijan, Calls For
    Closer Ties
    By Antoine Blua

    Ilham Aliyev said relations with Iran are improving

    Prague, 6 August 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Azerbaijan and Iran share a border
    but this has not been enough to foster close relations between the
    two. Iranian President Mohammad Khatami is visiting Azerbaijan this
    week. It's the first official trip to the neighboring country by an
    Iranian leader in more than 10 years.


    The three-day trip began yesterday and featured talks between Khatami
    and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. Speaking after the meeting,
    Khatami called for closer bilateral ties. He said history and
    geography have brought the fates of the two countries together.

    "The border between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Republic of
    Azerbaijan is a border of peace, friendship, and brotherhood,"
    Khatami said.

    Khatami said an Azerbaijani consular office will open in the
    northwestern Iranian city of Tabriz, the center of an Iranian
    province where millions of ethnic Azeris live. The sides also signed
    an agreement to improve road and rail links and to fund building an
    electricity line between Imisli in southern Azerbaijan and Astara at
    the Iranian border. "We have always felt Iran's support in the
    conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh." -
    Aliyev

    Azerbaijani leader Aliyev expressed satisfaction about the
    agreements, saying he believes relations between Azerbaijan and Iran
    are developing successfully. "The implementation of the agreements
    signed will create thousands of jobs in Azerbaijan," he said. "And
    agreements on energy and gas swaps will allow us to provide [the
    Autonomous Republic of] Nakichevan, which is integral part of
    Azerbaijan, with electricity and gas."

    On the political front, Aliyev praised Iran for what he called its
    "support" for Azerbaijan in the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave. "We have always felt Iran's support in the conflict between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh," he said. "And we are
    still feeling that today."

    Khatami said Iran is ready to contribute to a peaceful solution of
    the conflict. He added that Iran considers Nagorno-Karabakh part of
    Azerbaijan and that the use of force in settling international
    problems is "unacceptable."

    However, talks did not produce any breakthrough on the issue of the
    maritime borders of the Caspian Sea, which touches both countries.
    The legal status of the Caspian, which contains large reserves of oil
    and gas, has been in dispute since the Soviet Union collapsed in
    1991.

    Davood Hermidas Bavand teaches international law in Tehran. He said
    the visit was important nevertheless. "The significance of the visit
    is [the] development of good neighborly relationships with
    Azerbaijan, bearing in mind that we have certain difficulties with
    that state in connection with the Caspian Sea," he said. "The very
    objective of this visit is to [come to terms with] existing problems.
    When the two parties accept this kind of communication, it's an
    indication that there is a certain intention for improvement of the
    existing problems."

    Experts in Baku suggested the two sides would also discuss the
    growing U.S. military presence in Azerbaijan, which has contributed
    to the U.S.-led coalition forces in Iraq. But neither side was ready
    to comment.

    Khatami addressed Azerbaijan's parliament today and met with the
    parliamentary speaker. He is expected to visit Ganca, Azerbaijan's
    second-largest city, tomorrow before returning to Iran.
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