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Azeri foreign minister says setting up of NATO bases may take time

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  • Azeri foreign minister says setting up of NATO bases may take time

    Azeri foreign minister says setting up of NATO bases may take time

    Ekho, Baku
    20 Aug 04


    Judging by the nature of Russian media reports, Moscow is most of all
    concerned about Azerbaijan's military development. The first question
    journalists asked Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov at a
    final news conference in Moscow was about Azerbaijan's prospects for
    entering NATO.

    "I am always asked whether Azerbaijan wants to become a member of
    NATO. This question had better be addressed to NATO members,"
    Mammadyarov said.

    Asked about the possibility of setting up NATO bases in Azerbaijan,
    Mammadyarov said: "It is naive to think that military bases can be set
    up overnight." The minister also spoke about how difficult it was to
    agree the issue of establishing military bases, namely, between
    parliaments.

    Touching on military and technical cooperation with Russia, he said
    that the issue had been discussed at his meeting with Russian Foreign
    Minister Sergey Lavrov. Mammadyarov mentioned that Azerbaijan and
    Russia were already maintaining military and technical cooperation and
    Azerbaijan had leased its Qabala radar station to Russia. Also, there
    is an exchange programme between the defence ministries of the two
    countries.

    Speaking about the role of Russia in the region, the minister said
    that Moscow should step up its role in resolving the Karabakh
    conflict. "We are expecting the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen to say
    their word in resolving the conflict," the minister said. The minister
    pointed to the inviolability of the territorial integrity principle.

    Mammadyarov also spoke about the Caspian legal status and said that
    Azerbaijan was counting on the speediest solution of the issue. "A
    solution to this issue is not too far off," he said. According to him,
    the problem of dividing the Caspian should not be "viewed as a serious
    one". "The recent visit by the Iranian president to Azerbaijan and my
    visit to Tehran have laid the foundations for progress," the
    Azerbaijani foreign minister said.

    [Passage omitted: reported details]

    "Azerbaijan stands for further cooperation with Russia in the energy
    sector," he said. Speaking about economic cooperation between the two
    countries, he said "cooperation in the energy sector is part of
    it". "[Russia's] LUKoil is actively working in Azerbaijan but there
    are opportunities for other companies as well," Mammadyarov said.

    He also said that Azerbaijan was implementing a number of projects
    towards establishing a transport corridor from Russia through
    Azerbaijan and Iran to the Persian Gulf. Namely, both Russia and Iran
    support the construction of the North-South railway corridor.

    "Russia supports the idea of accessing the Persian Gulf through
    Azerbaijan and Iran," the minister said. He mentioned that Azerbaijan
    had completed the construction of the railway to Astara [town on
    Azerbaijan-Iran border], while Iran was building a railway line to the
    town with the same name on its own territory. "When a railway bridge
    between these two towns is built, the corridor will start working. An
    agreement on the construction of the bridge has already been reached,"
    he said.

    Also, Azerbaijan is in talks with Greece on possible supplies of
    natural gas there. "Agreements have been signed with Georgia and
    Turkey and talks with Greece are under way," he said when answering a
    question about ways of exporting Azerbaijani gas. "I think more
    customers will be found in Europe after Greece," he added.

    According to him, oil is now of higher priority than gas. "We hope
    that first tankers with our oil will leave the port of Ceyhan [in
    Turkey] in the summer of 2005," he said and added that about 1m
    barrels of oil are to be pumped through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline every day.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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