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BAKU: Azerbaijan urges drive to resolve Karabakh dispute

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  • BAKU: Azerbaijan urges drive to resolve Karabakh dispute

    Azerbaijan urges drive to resolve Karabakh dispute


    ISTANBUL, June 26 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan called on the international
    community to help resolve its chronic dispute with Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh on Saturday, arguing that the region was a potential
    hotbed for drug-running and terror.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev clashed at a conference in Istanbul with
    an Armenian official who described the territory as an "established
    entity" with governing institutions and a ceasefire that has held for
    a decade since a six-year conflict.

    "Nagorno-Karabakh is an entity which is not recognised by anyone in
    the world," the president responded to a comment from Armenian foreign
    ministry official Garen Nazarian.

    "It is an unrecognised, self-proclaimed, illegal so-called entity.
    Azerbaijan will never agree with the loss of its territory, we will
    get these territories back."

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a territory wholly inside Azerbaijan, populated by
    Christian ethnic Armenians, which broke away from Baku's rule as the
    Soviet Union collapsed. The Azeris, their country controlling large
    oil resources, want it back.

    The Minsk Group of 11 countries, led by France, the United States and
    Russia under the mandate of the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, has so far failed to settle the problem.

    Aliyev said that "Armenian occupation" had left one million of
    Azerbaijan's population of eight million as either refugees or
    internally displaced persons, and Nagorno-Karabakh had become one of
    the southern Caucasus's "uncontrolled lawless zones."

    "Nagorno-Karabakh poses a very serious threat for the region --there
    is no international control, no international monitoring and no rule
    of law," he told the security conference which set the stage for a
    NATO summit in the Turkish city next week.

    "This is a very comfortable place for criminal elements. There
    is...some very significant evidence of illegal drug trafficking in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, of terrorism camps."

    Aliyev appealed for more active efforts to resolve the dispute from
    the "broad international community," including the European Union, the
    Council of Europe and other international institutions.

    Asked by Nazarian why he was not satisfied with the mediation efforts
    of the Minsk Group, Aliyev replied: "Because there is no result."



    06/26/04 13:53 ET
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