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BAKU: Aliyev: Building a Powerful Army is a Priority for Azerbaijan

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  • BAKU: Aliyev: Building a Powerful Army is a Priority for Azerbaijan

    Aliyev: Building up of a Powerful Army is a Priority for Azerbaijan

    Baku Today
    15/07/2004

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on Wednesday said building up of a
    strong army is a priority for his government and that more funds would
    be allocated from the state budget for this end as the country's
    economy becomesmore powerful.

    Aliyev said thanks to the successful development of Azerbaijan's
    economy, the incomes of the state budget have raised and one-thirds of
    this surplus money would be spent on the army.

    `This is our priority issue and Azerbaijan has a powerful army. This
    army has to be stronger and it will be,' Azertag state news agency
    quoted Aliyev as saying during the opening ceremony of a new plant in
    Baku.

    The president said Azerbaijan is the leading nation of the region in
    terms of economic development. He noted that $17 billion has been
    invested in the Azerbaijani economy over the past decade and that the
    figure puts the country to the forefronts of not only the former
    Soviet republics, but also of the countries of Europe.

    President Aliyev reiterated his government's stand on the settlement
    of the 16-year-long Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over the latter's
    Nagono-Karabakh region.

    `[The conflict] can be resolved only by keeping Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity. Azerbaijan will not back down from its position
    on the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. This is a fair
    position,' he added.

    Armenian troops invaded and took control over Nagorno-Karabakh - a
    western Azeri region that was home to nearly 100,000 ethnic-Armenians,
    according to 1989 census - along with seven surrounding Azerbaijani
    districts in 1991-94 war.

    The war killed 20,000 Azeris and expelled 700,000 from their homes in
    the occupied territories. About 300,000 more Azeris fled from Armenia
    and the same number of Armenians left Azerbaijan as a result of the
    conflict.

    A cease-fire agreement reached between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1994
    is largely held, but peace-negotiations mediated by the Minsk group of
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has yielded no
    result.
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