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OSCE peace envoys in Azerbaijan for talks

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  • OSCE peace envoys in Azerbaijan for talks

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 16, 2004 Friday 3:21 AM Eastern Time

    OSCE peace envoys in Azerbaijan for talks

    BAKU


    International envoys helping to mediate a peace deal between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan in a conflict over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh
    said Friday they had held useful talks with Azerbaijan's President
    Ilham Aliyev.

    The trio of envoys from France, Russia and the United States which
    make up the so-called Minsk Group, were in the Azeri capital, Baku,
    after a round of meetings with officials in Armenia.

    The mediators refused to disclose any of the details of their talks,
    saying only they remained committed to helping find a peaceful
    solution to the 15-year-old conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly
    Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan.

    "We have just come from a very cordial and useful meeting with
    President Aliyev," US mediator Steven Mann told a press conference.

    "We will remain active in fulfilling the Minsk Group's mandate ...
    which is to support discussions and negotiations between the two
    sides," Mann added.

    "We believe that a peaceful resolution to the conflict is possible
    and we believe that peaceful ways are the only ways that this
    conflict can and must be settled."

    Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a four-year war over the enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, which cost an estimated 35,000 lives and forced
    about one million people on both sides to flee their homes.

    A ceasefire was agreed in 1994, leaving Armenian forces in de facto
    control of the enclave and surrounding Azeri regions. Azerbaijan has
    said it is determined to force Armenian troops out of the territory.

    Peace talks have been taking place intermittently for 10 years, under
    the mediation of the Minsk Group, to hammer out a permanent solution.

    But an agreement has proved elusive and insiders say that negotiators
    are as far from a deal now as they have been at any point in the
    peace process.

    In Azerbaijan, which sees itself as the victim of the conflict, there
    is growing frustration about the failure to reach a deal, with many
    people calling for a return to hostilities.

    Criticism has also been targetted at the Minsk Group, which is
    operating under a mandate from the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe.

    The envoys said Friday they were being made "scapegoats" for the
    failure to find a lasting settlement to the conflict, but that they
    would not give in to their critics.

    "Whether you like us or not, whether you agree or not with the
    format, you will have to face our three faces," French envoy Henry
    Jacolin told reporters.

    The unresolved conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh is destabilising a
    region which is taking on increasing strategic importance for the
    West.

    A multi-billion-dollar pipeline is being built, with Washington's
    backing, to export crude oil from Azerbaijan's sector of the Caspian
    Sea, through Georgia and Turkey, to the Mediterranean Sea.

    In places, the pipeline will pass within a few kilometres (miles) of
    the tense front line separating Armenian and Azeri forces, the scene
    of frequent firefights.
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