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OSCE reps to hold talks in Baku on settling Karabakh conflict

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  • OSCE reps to hold talks in Baku on settling Karabakh conflict

    OSCE reps to hold talks in Baku on settling Karabakh conflict

    TASS/Baku
    July 15, 2004 Thursday


    By Sevindzh Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman


    Co-chairmen of the Minsk Group, set up by the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) for settling the dragged-out
    ethnic conflict in Nagorny Karabakh, are holding talks with top-rank
    Azerbaijani officials here Thursday.

    The OSCE representatives - Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia, Steven Mann of
    the U.S., and Henri Jacolin of France - are expected to meet with
    President Ilham Aliyev and Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov.

    Politicians in Baku do not expect any special proposals from the three
    men on how to settle the conflict between the ethnic Azerbaijanis and
    Armenians in and around Nagorny Karabakh that has been smoldering
    since the end of the 1980's, but Minister Mamedyarov does not rule out
    that new ideas about stepping up the talks may come up in the process
    of discussions.

    "The absence of new proposals doesn't mean that the negotiations have
    deadlocked, all the more so that the contours of the new ideas, which
    we have discussed with the Armenian side, are getting clear," he said.

    As the three co-chairmen of the Minsk Group addressed a news
    conference in Yerevan Wednesday, they indicated there could hardly be
    anything new in their proposals now, as resolution of the conflict was
    highly contingent on the actions on both Azerbaijani and Armenian
    sides.

    "We believe the sides must not waste time away, and actions must be
    taken right now," said the Russian envoy Yuri Merzlyakov.

    "The sides are now working on the agenda of future talks in the light
    of changes in the situation after elections in Azerbaijan," he said.

    Steven Mann, a U.S. envoy, said solution of the problem was highly
    contingent on the stance that Armenia and Azerbaijan would take, and
    the Minsk Group could only help the sides tap the practical solutions.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan will bear the brunt of responsibility for
    decision-making, and the OSCE leaves it up to them to decide on who
    should take part in the talks, Mann said.

    The French envoy, Henri Jacolin, said the talks would definitely take
    some time, since one or two meetings would by no means suffice to
    untangle a conflict like the one in Nagorny Karabakh.

    He also warned that there was no external force, including the Minsk
    Group that could possibly offer a miraculous solution to the Karabakh
    problem.

    Jacolin stressed the European Union's great interest in a peaceful
    settlement of the dragged-out conflict and in general stability in
    Southern Caucasus, in the light of which the Europeans were closely
    watching the progress of talks on Karabakh.
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