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Azerbaijan believes Nagorno-Karabakh talks necessary - Aliyev

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  • Azerbaijan believes Nagorno-Karabakh talks necessary - Aliyev

    Azerbaijan believes Nagorno-Karabakh talks necessary - Aliyev

    Interfax
    Sept 3 2004

    Baku. (Interfax-Azerbaijan) - Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
    has said he believes negotiations on settling the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict should be continued.

    "The fact that I have not yet abandoned negotiations on Nagorno-
    Karabakh means that I believe in their productivity. I have said
    repeatedly that I am not going to take part in negotiations just
    to imitate them. If we see at some point that negotiations are
    inefficient, Azerbaijan will be the first to stop this process. Now
    I believe there is a need for negotiations," Aliyev told the press
    in Naxcivan on Thursday.

    "The negotiations are underway, and foreign ministers continue
    to meet. But we have so far been unable to reach any agreement,"
    Aliyev said.

    He said he hopes "the negotiations will bring about a result."

    Touching on criticism that some CIS countries leveled at the OSCE at
    the latest summit in July, the Azerbaijani president said, "Our opinion
    was expressed at the summit in July, when Azerbaijan did not sign this
    statement. We are pursuing a policy independent from anybody," he said.

    "This independence is above all for us. Therefore, relations between
    us and the OSCE concern only us. We could also be critical about the
    OSCE activity, and we have expressed this criticism. I personally
    expressed our displeasure in a very harsh form right after elections.
    But these issues concern only us," he said.

    "The issue that was raised at the July summit is of a political nature,
    and Azerbaijan is not going to join this issue," he said.

    Baku lost control over Nagorno-Karabakh and areas adjacent to it in
    a bloody conflict with Armenia in the early 1990s. Co-chairmen of
    the OSCE Minsk Group representing the U.S., Russia, and France are
    mediating in the conflict settlement.
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