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NATO chief hails alliance relations with Armenia

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  • NATO chief hails alliance relations with Armenia

    Agence France Presse
    Nov. 5, 2004

    NATO chief hails alliance relations with Armenia

    YEREVAN (AFP) Nov 05, 2004

    NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer Friday hailed the
    alliance's relations with the former Soviet republic of Armenia as he
    wrapped up a tour of the Caucasus.
    "Armenia has agreed in principle to start work on an Individual
    Partnership Action Plan (IPAP) with NATO," he said after arriving in
    Armenia from Azerbaijan.

    "This is quite a significant step in the development of our relations,"
    he said.

    De Hoop Scheffer arrived in Armenia at the tail end of his tour of the
    Caucasus that also took him to Georgia and Azerbaijan.

    Earlier in Baku on Friday, he told Azerbaijan to "turn a page" in its
    relations with archrival Armenia, its neighbor with which it remains in
    a state of war.

    "At a certain stage you'll have to turn a page," de Hoop Scheffer said
    as he prepared to fly out of oil-rich Azerbaijan, where he met with
    President Ilham Aliyev, to neighboring Armenia to hold talks with its
    President Robert Kocharian.

    The former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a war in
    the 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave in Azeri territory.

    A cease-fire agreement was signed in 1994 with Nagorno-Karabakh
    effectively remaining in Armenian hands, but with Baku still claiming
    rights to it. The two sides have yet to sign a peace treaty and
    formally remain in a state of war.

    In September, Azerbaijan refused to let officers from Armenia take part
    in NATO-sponsored war games on its territory. The games were called off
    as a result.

    "These kind of activities should be accessible for anybody and
    everybody," De Hoop Scheffer said Friday. "My advice would be if there
    is Armenian representation, what is a better way ... to discuss these
    fundamental problems. Let the Azeri voice be heard also in the presence
    of (Armenians)."

    The war between Armenia and Azerbaijan killed an estimated 35,000
    people and displace close to one million.

    Years of negotiations chaired by the so-called Minsk group -- chaired
    by France, Russia and the United States and operating under a mandate
    from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe -- have
    failed to find a solution and today no transport or communication lines
    link the two neighbors.

    Nagorno-Karabakh "is a big problem which has created a lot of suffering
    already for much too many years and which urgently needs a solution,"
    De Hoop Scheffer said.

    The NATO chief arrived in Baku from neighboring Georgia, where he met
    with President Mikhail Saakashvili, who aims to join the alliance
    within four years.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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