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Karabakh Had To Be Transferred Under Armenian Sovereignty In Key Wes

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  • Karabakh Had To Be Transferred Under Armenian Sovereignty In Key Wes

    KARABAKH HAD TO BE TRANSFERRED UNDER ARMENIAN SOVEREIGNTY IN KEY WEST,
    BRITISH RESEARCHER WRITES

    11.05.2004 16:41

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The international mediators for settlement of
    the Nagorno Karabakh conflict from the US, France and Russia have
    proposed several modes for solution of the problem. However, the most
    courageous was the Key West one. As reported by Liberty radio station,
    Wall Street Journal reports it referring to Thomas de Waal, the author
    of a book on the Karabakh conflict. For the fist time lifting the
    veil of mystery of the settlement project, presented in the course
    of the talks in Key West US city, de Waal notes that in compliance
    with that version, "Armenia had to provide an opportunity to 95%
    of Azeri refugees to return to their homes." Besides, "a way to the
    Azeri enclave of Nakhichevan had to be opened through the territory of
    Armenia." In exchange, in de Waal's words, "Azerbaijan had to refuse
    from Karabakh, except for Shushi town." Citing the second item of the
    Key West document on "conveying Karabakh under the sovereignty of
    Armenia," the author notes that if it is the case, "from the human
    point of view the benefit would be the biggest, however so would be
    the political risk for Azerbaijan." Member of the British Institute for
    War and Peace Reporting Thomas de Waal also considers the opportunity
    of resumption of hostilities. "The human price of a new war will be
    horrible even if the conflict is local. Azerbaijan will lose thousands
    of young people only on minefield, which lie along the whole of the
    front line. And the small beautiful province in the middle - Nagorno
    Karabakh - may disappear at all," he forecasts. At that Thomas de Waal
    considers the Karabakh conflict solvable, noting if it is the case
    "both nations will be saved from isolation." "Armenians and Azeris
    have much more in common, than, e.g., Israelis and Palestinians," he
    writes. The percentage of mixed nationality family couples was rather
    high. "The problem is that for already more than ten years the two
    nations rarely enter into a dialogue," the author considers. "The most
    surprising for a person from the outside is that Azerbaijan does not
    sit at a bargaining table with Karabakh Armenians, whom it considers
    its citizens," the Wall Street Journal article sums up.
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