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Oskanian Discusses Karabakh On Russia Visit

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  • Oskanian Discusses Karabakh On Russia Visit

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    July 7 2004

    Oskanian Discusses Karabakh On Russia Visit

    By Aza Babayan in Moscow 07/07/2004 11:01

    The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and economic issues figured prominently
    during Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian talks with senior Russian
    officials in Moscow on Tuesday.

    Oskanian met with Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and
    high-level lawmakers on a rare visit to the Russian capital which
    some observers in Yerevan link to the renewed international efforts
    to find a solution to the Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute.

    `We discussed the Karabakh problem and can talk about some positive
    movements there,' Lavrov told a joint news conference with his
    Armenian counterpart. He cited the recent series of meetings between
    the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers as well as the `more
    active' work of the Russian, French and U.S. co-chairs of the OSCE's
    Minsk Group.

    Both Lavrov and Oskanian would not go into details of their
    discussions on Karabakh. The latter said only that he is `very
    satisfied' with the results of the talks. `This shows that the agenda
    of our dialogue is quite extensive and deep,' he said.

    A separate statement by the Armenian Foreign Ministry said Oskanian
    briefed Lavrov on his trilateral meeting in Istanbul last week with
    the Azerbaijani and Turkish foreign ministers. Turkey is seen as
    trying to overcome Azerbaijani opposition to the reopening of its
    border with Armenia with efforts to facilitate a Karabakh settlement.


    The statement said Russian-Armenian commercial ties was another major
    topic of the Moscow talks, with both sides agreeing on the need for
    `restoring transport communication' between the two allied states.
    `The Russian side promised to keep the issue at the center of its
    attention,' it said, underscoring Armenia's long-running efforts to
    restore rail communication with Russia via Georgia's breakaway
    republic of Abkhazia.

    Oskanian was also cited as calling for a `prompt revival' of the five
    state-run Armenian enterprises that were handed over to Russia last
    year as part of a swap agreement to settle Yerevan's $100 million
    debt to Moscow. Critics have questioned the Russians' ability to
    breathe a new life into those enterprises, claiming that the deal has
    only deepened Armenia's economic dependence on its former Soviet
    master.

    Unlike President Robert Kocharian who seems to take every opportunity
    to confer with Russia's President Vladimir Putin, Oskanian has not
    been a frequent guest in Moscow since being appointed foreign
    minister in 1998. Tuesday's meetings marked his first official visit
    to the country.

    They also led to a surprise revelation that Lavrov, who was the
    Kremlin's longtime representative to the United Nations before
    becoming foreign minister recently, has ethnic Armenian roots. `I
    have Armenian blood,' he told journalists. `My father is an Armenian
    from Tbilisi.'
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