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  • Azerbaijan threatens renewed war

    Azerbaijan threatens renewed war

    BBC News
    Last Updated: Wednesday, 12 May, 2004, 16:59 GMT 17:59 UK

    Wednesday marks the 10th anniversary of the ceasefire

    Azerbaijan's president has warned the country is ready to return to war
    with Armenia - on the 10th anniversary of a ceasefire between the two.
    Ilham Aliyev said he was trying to find a peaceful solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, but the Azeri army was prepared to "free"
    the territory.

    Ministers from both sides are reportedly meeting to try to agree a
    peace settlement.

    But our correspondent says relations are, if anything, worse than ever.

    'Right to war'

    "We are trying to resolve this problem by peaceful means but so far
    we have not been able to achieve that," Mr Aliyev said at a military
    base just a few miles from the border with Armenia.

    "We must increase our military potential. Our army is able at any
    moment to free our territory," he said, according to the AFP news
    agency.

    "We have every right to do that, to restore our territorial integrity,
    and international law is on our side since Armenia violated all
    international norms."

    Mr Aliyev added that government expenditure on Azerbaijan's military
    was increasing each year, "and it will keep increasing in the future".

    The leaders of the two countries signed a ceasefire in May 1994,
    but there is sporadic fighting along the ceasefire line.

    The foreign ministers of both countries were meeting in Strasbourg,
    and were expected to discuss Armenia returning some of the Karabakh
    regions to Azeri control, in exchange for reopening transport links.

    But the peace process appears to be going nowhere, says the BBC's
    Chloe Arnold in the capital Baku.

    The ceasefire ended five years of hostilities which erupted when
    the Soviet Union collapsed, and Armenians living in the mountainous
    territory of Karabakh demanded independence from Soviet Azerbaijan.

    Thousands died and one million were forced out of their homes in
    the conflict.

    Our correspondent says there is growing impatience with the peace
    process in Azerbaijan, where many ordinary people here now say the
    only way to resolve the dispute is to go back to war.
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