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Azerbaijan seeks global help in Karabakh dispute

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  • Azerbaijan seeks global help in Karabakh dispute

    Azerbaijan seeks global help in Karabakh dispute


    LONDON, Dec 13 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan's president called on the
    European Union and United Nations to do more to resolve a long-running
    territorial dispute with neighbouring Armenia over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region on Monday.

    Ilham Aliyev, who has vowed never to give up the breakaway territory
    populated by ethnic Armenians but which has been legally part of
    Azerbaijan since the Soviet era, said his oil-rich country was
    committed to a peaceful resolution.

    But he stressed years of talks had yielded no results and said the
    global community should get involved.

    "Other international organisations should play a more active role --
    the EU, the Council of Europe and the United Nations," Aliyev told an
    audience at London's Royal Institute of International Affairs.

    "I think that broad international attention and keeping this issue on
    the agenda of international organisations will help bring peace," he
    added, giving no further details.

    Western companies, including Britain's BP have invested heavily in
    Azerbaijan, most notably in the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline which will
    deliver oil from the Caspian to the Mediterranean.

    The dispute over the mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh region began 16
    years ago but it erupted into one of the bloodiest ethnic wars in the
    dying days of the Soviet Union, when an estimated 35,000 people were
    killed.

    About 1 million refugees fled to Azerbaijan and thousands of ethnic
    Armenian refugees also fled to Armenia.

    A truce was agreed in 1994 but there has been little movement to end
    the dispute.

    Last month Azerbaijan urged the U.N. General Assembly to intervene but
    France, Russia and the United States asked the body not to interfere
    with efforts they were making on behalf of the Organisation for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    "Azerbaijan will never agree to occupation and we will do what we can
    and make sure our land will be free," said Aliyev.

    The president has signalled some impatience and does not rule out
    military action if Armenia does not pull out.

    Experts also note that Azerbaijan is actively working on defence
    projects and increasing its defence budget.



    12/13/04 13:16 ET

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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