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Azerbaijani president says peace treaty on Nagorno-Karabakh onlyposs

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  • Azerbaijani president says peace treaty on Nagorno-Karabakh onlyposs

    Azerbaijani president says peace treaty on Nagorno-Karabakh only possible
    after seized territory is freed

    AP Worldstream
    Nov 09, 2004

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev said Tuesday that ethnic Armenian
    forces in Nagorno-Karabakh must withdraw before a peace agreement
    can be signed.

    "We demand with justification that the seized territory be freed and
    the occupation forces withdraw," Aliev said during a visit to Astara,
    about 315 kilometers (about 195 miles) south of the capital, Baku.

    Armenian forces drove the Azerbaijani army out of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    an ethnic Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, in the 1990s and took
    control of several areas outside the enclave as well. Since a 1994
    cease-fire, the sides have been separated by the so-called "line of
    control," a demilitarized buffer zone, but occasional shooting breaks
    out and each side accuses the other of mounting small incursions.

    Negotiators under the auspices of the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe are trying to work out an agreement on
    Nagorno-Karabakh's final status, but no visible progress has been made
    in recent years and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev has repeatedly
    raised the prospect of military action if no negotiated solution
    is reached.

    "It is possible to sign a peace agreement only after the occupied
    land is freed," Aliev said.

    Aliev also announced that this ex-Soviet republic would boost defense
    spending next year. Finance Minister Avez Alekperov said it would
    increase by about 33.5 percent from the 732 billion manat (US$149
    million, Aâ~B¬115 million) allocated on defense this year.

    --Boundary_(ID_GjpHpI7yWVRqmnXNiEqScg)--
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