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  • EU to benefit from cheap gas imports

    EU to benefit from cheap gas imports

    EUpolitix, Belgium
    May 19 2004

    European consumers should be able to benefit from cheap gas imports
    from Azerbaijan in five or six years time, the country's leader
    has predicted.

    The delivery of Azerbaijani gas to Turkey and to Europe in large
    quantities would ensure "an alternative and cheap supply" for European
    customers, President Ilham Aliyev told a meeting of the Brussels-based
    think tank, the European Policy Centre.

    "In five or six years, Azerbaijani gas in big quantities will be
    supplied to Europe," he said, commenting that this would be even more
    important for consumers than the country's burgeoning oil industry.

    "We will allow our neighbours and friends to benefit," he assured.

    Aliyev, on a two day diplomatic visit to the EU's Brussels
    headquarters, stressed Baku's "strategic choice" to pursue closer
    ties with Europe.

    "Our relations with the EU are developing very successfully.
    Azerbaijan has a strategically committed to a policy of integration
    into European structures."

    EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said on Tuesday he expected
    the EU's relationship with the former Soviet state to increase,
    specifically in the field of energy.

    The country, along with Caucasus neighbours Armenia and Georgia was
    recently added by the European Commission to its 'New Neighbourhood'
    policy, which seeks closer relations with countries around the newly
    expanded EU.

    Aliyev used a Tuesday meeting with European Commission chief Romano
    Prodi to appeal to the EU to help find a solution to a ten year
    territorial dispute with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    "We hope that the EU, other international organisations and the OSCE
    [Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe] will play a more
    active role and allow the people of Azerbaijan to come back," he said.

    Although the two republics have signed a ceasefire, no political
    solution has been found to end the bitter dispute over the enclave,
    which makes up around five per cent of the area of Azerbaijan.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory which falls entirely within Azerbaijan
    and is populated by Christian ethnic Armenians, broke away from Baku
    when the Soviet Union collapsed.

    A five year war over the land claimed around 35 000 lives and created
    around one million refugees.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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