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  • Karabakh must be involved in talks, former top official says

    KARABAGH MUST BE INVOLVED IN TALKS, FORMER TOP OFFICIAL SAYS

    ArmenPress
    May 12 2004

    YEREVAN, MAY 12, ARMENPRESS: A former top official in the
    administration of ex-president Levon Ter-Petrosian backed up today
    the idea that Nagorno Karabagh authorities must be involved in talks
    over its future. Babken Ararktsian, a former parliament chairman,
    told a news conference, which he called on the occasion of the 10-th
    anniversary of the establishment of ceasefire on the line of contact
    between Armenian troops of Nagorno Karabagh and Azerbaijan forces that
    Karabagh had been involved in all talks with various international
    peace-brokers, held prior to the ceasefire.

    Reverting to the details of the ceasefire agreement, Ararktsian
    said it was a key decision by all the sides to the conflict, who
    realized that continuation of the war would bring only new losses.
    Ararktsian recalled today that one of the provisions of the agreement
    was that Nagorno Karabagh should continue participating in all talks
    and that the overland connection between Armenia and Karabagh through
    the Lachin corridor should operate.

    The first international mediation effort to resolve the Nagorno
    Karabagh conflict was attempted by the presidents of the not yet
    independent Russia and Kazakhstan, Boris Yeltsin and Nursultan
    Nazarbayev, respectively, in September 1991. Their visits to Baku,
    Stepanakert, and Yerevan, and subsequent talks between the leaders of
    Armenia and Azerbaijan in Zheleznovodsk, Russia produced an agreement
    to negotiate the conflict; this was negated by the government of
    Azerbaijan almost immediately.

    The international involvement in the resolution of this conflict began
    in earnest in 1992, after successor states to the Soviet Union had
    been admitted to the Conference (later Organization) for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe. The CSCE (OSCE) thus became the primary venue
    for the resolution of the Nagorno Karabagh conflict, and remains so
    to this day.

    On March 24, 1992, a CSCE Council meeting in Helsinki decided to
    authorize the CSCE Chairman-in-Office (i.e., the presiding officer
    of the CSCE who is usually the foreign minister of the country
    presiding in the organization, based on rotation principle) to
    convene a conference on Nagorno Karabagh under the auspices of the
    CSCE. The purpose of the conference was "to provide an ongoing forum
    for negotiations towards a peaceful settlement of the crisis on the
    basis of the principles, commitments and provisions of the CSCE." This
    decision launched the so-called Minsk Process, which spearheads the
    international effort to find a political settlement of the conflict.
    (The process is so named because the city of Minsk, Belarus had
    been originally selected as the site of the future conference on
    this problem.)

    The objectives of the Minsk Process are to provide an appropriate
    framework for conflict resolution to support the negotiation process
    supported by the Minsk Group; to obtain conclusion by the Parties
    of an agreement on the cessation of the armed conflict in order to
    permit the convening of the Minsk Conference; and to promote the
    peace process by deploying OSCE multinational peacekeeping forces.

    Ararktsian argued today that after the Karabagh conflict transformed
    into "a territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan
    has snatched off the ceasefire becoming its master to ground that it
    can revoke the ceasefire agreement any time in order to restore its
    territorial integrity." In concluding Ararktsian aid the resolution
    of the conflict must be based on the principle of self-determination
    of Karabagh Armenians and mutual compromises.
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