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NK: UN General Assembly To Discuss Occupation Of Azerbaijani Land

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  • NK: UN General Assembly To Discuss Occupation Of Azerbaijani Land

    Nagorno-Karabakh: UN General Assembly To Discuss Occupation Of Azerbaijani Land
    By Robert McMahon

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Nov 23 2004

    Azerbaijan is hoping a proposed UN General Assembly resolution on its
    occupied territory will help resolve a key impediment to peace talks
    with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh. The resolution, to be discussed
    today (eds: 1600 Prague time), calls for reaffirming Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity and seeks an investigation into Azerbaijani
    claims Armenia is promoting a settlement policy in the occupied
    lands. Armenia denies this and has said such a resolution could
    undermine the peace process.


    United Nations, 23 November 2004 (RFE/RL) - The UN General Assembly
    was expected to open discussion today on a resolution seeking to
    address Azerbaijan's concerns about its occupied territories and
    sluggish peace process with Armenia.

    The resolution calls for a reaffirmation of Azerbaijan's sovereignty
    and territorial integrity 10 years after ethnic Armenian forces won
    control over Nagorno-Karabakh and occupied several districts adjacent
    to the enclave.

    It expresses "alarm and grave concern" at the situation in the area
    occupied by Armenian forces, alleging the violation of international
    humanitarian laws. The measure also raises concern about reports of
    Armenian settlers being transferred to the territories.

    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told reporters
    yesterday that the persistence of such reports, from international
    and Armenian sources, was a main factor driving the initiative in
    the assembly. The resolution invites the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which is directing peace talks,
    to send a fact-finding mission to lands occupied by ethnic Armenian
    forces to report on the situation.

    "We get greatly concerned that the Armenian government is conducting
    a settlers' policy in the occupied territories, which we consider
    as a pure violation of international humanitarian law, including the
    Geneva conventions of 1949," Mammadyarov said.

    Diplomats at Armenia's UN mission did not respond to repeated requests
    for comment yesterday. When the issue was placed on the assembly's
    agenda in October, Armenian officials said there were no settlements
    in the territories outside the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and denied
    there was any policy to settle those lands.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian recently warned that
    Azerbaijan's initiative in the assembly threatened to undermine
    mediation efforts under the OSCE's Minsk Group. A French diplomat
    speaking on behalf of the group told the General Assembly in October
    that the group did not believe UN was the proper forum to discuss
    the matter.

    Mammadyarov said yesterday that his government remained committed to
    the Minsk process but was looking to spur progress on issues related
    to its large number of displaced persons. The resolution, though
    nonbinding, would seek to expand international pressure for a solution.

    "We do not agree that [the resolution] can create bad consequences
    for the peace process," Mammadyarov said. "We consider that even it
    will support the peace process because otherwise you cannot conduct
    sincere peace negotiations, and simultaneously behind the scenes [the]
    Armenian side [is] conducting negotiations providing the so-called
    settlement process."

    The initiative follows strong comments by Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev at the General Assembly debate in September. Aliyev faulted
    the UN for neglecting the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh,
    citing UN Security Council resolutions in 1993 that called for the
    withdrawal of ethnic Armenian forces from Azerbaijani territory.

    Mammadyarov said he also wants to see countries in the Minsk Group,
    especially the United States, become more active in pressing for a
    negotiated solution to the conflict.

    "The conflict is very, very difficult. Of course, the settlement of
    the conflict is not very easy," Mammadyarov said. "What we're calling
    [for] is that it should be solved only by the efforts of [the whole]
    international community."

    The war over Nagorno-Karabakh has driven an estimated 800,000
    Azerbaijanis from their homes, about a tenth of the country's
    population. Azerbaijan's internally displaced people cannot return to
    Armenian-occupied territories, and many have been living in wretched
    conditions for the past 10 years.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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