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Azeri leader says territorial row turning dangerous

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  • Azeri leader says territorial row turning dangerous

    Reuters
    Oct 1 2004

    Azeri leader says territorial row turning dangerous

    Source: Reuters

    By Magarita Antidze and Jonathan Thatcher

    BAKU, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan's president said on Friday that an
    impasse over Nagorno-Karabakh was dangerous for the restive Caucasus
    region and warned that his country would not wait forever to settle
    the issue with neighbouring Armenia.

    Ilham Aliyev said the oil-rich country would never surrender its
    claim to the territory, populated by ethnic Armenians but legally
    part of Azerbaijan since the Soviet era and scene of one of the
    bloodiest ethnic wars that followed communism's collapse.

    "I agree that nothing is changing. That is very dangerous, I think,"
    Aliyev said in a rare interview with the foreign media.

    "International law norms have to be restored, the territorial
    integrity of Azerbaijan must be restored, Armenian military forces
    should pull out from occupied territories. Only this is a condition
    for peace," the president told Reuters.

    The dispute over the region began 16 years ago but it was in the
    dying days of the Soviet Union that it erupted into a war in which an
    estimated 35,000 people were killed.

    About one million refugees fled to Azerbaijan where they remain,
    though their grim living conditions have begun to improve since
    Aliyev came to power almost exactly a year ago.

    Thousands of ethnic Armenian refugees also fled to Armenia. A truce
    was agreed in 1994, but there has been little movement to end the
    dispute, despite international meditation.

    Asked if by saying "dangerous" he meant a return to war, he said: "If
    there is no peace for so many years and negotiations do not bring any
    result, what can be the alternative?

    "The Caucasus in general are not stable. Not having peace between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan does not help regional security. The longer
    the conflict stays unresolved, the more dangerous the resumption of
    military action will be."

    COMMITTED, OPTIMISTIC

    But Aliyev, elected after the death of his father who had ruled the
    country by the Caspian Sea almost uninterrupted from 1969, said he
    remained committed to resolving the issue peacefully. He was
    optimistic of a solution and urged the international community to do
    more to help.

    Azerbaijan demands the return of Nagorno-Karabakh and other parts of
    its territory occupied in the conflict. Armenia insists the
    mountainous region, once ruled by its president Robert Kocharyan,
    should decide its own fate.

    "We want to resolve it by political means ... we hope this will
    happen. But at the same time, everyone should understand that we are
    not going to agree with the fact of occupation and our patience has
    its limits," he said.

    "We will never compromise on our territorial integrity and
    sovereignty."

    When asked how long he was prepared to wait, he said: "If or when we
    see and we are convinced that there is no use continuing the
    negotiations, of course we will stop.

    "When we see that all political means are exhausted and there is no
    way to peacefully restore our sovereignty, then the Azeri government
    will start to think about other means."
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