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BAKU: Banning Armenian officers' visit would not hurt relations with

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  • BAKU: Banning Armenian officers' visit would not hurt relations with

    Banning Armenian officers' visit would not hurt relations with NATO

    Baku Today, Azerbaijan
    Sept 5 2004

    The Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan (PFPA) hosted a roundtable,
    "Repressions against those who care for Garabagh and public opinion",
    on Friday.

    AssA-Irada/BT -- The party chairman Ali Karimli condemned the arrest
    of the Garabagh Liberation Organization (GLO) members and said
    that allowing Armenian officers to Azerbaijan represents a policy
    of surrender.

    Karimli stated that Armenia's aggression against Azerbaijan is not
    creating any hurdles for this country's cooperation with NATO, and
    that forbidding the visit of Armenian officers to Baku would not hurt
    the NATO-Azerbaijan relations either. He demanded the government to
    put end to such a policy, not to interact with Armenia in any way
    until Azerbaijan's occupied territories are liberated.

    The PFPA chairman also demanded to ban the visit of Armenian officers
    to Baku and to release the imprisoned GLO members. He also said it
    was important for local media to express a common national position
    with regard to the GLO members.

    Azerbaijan lost control over its mainly ethnic-Armenian populated
    autonomous region of Nagorno(Daghlig)-Karabakh and also over its
    seven administrative districts, Lachin, Kalbejer, Aghdam, Fuzuli,
    Jerail, Zengilan and Gubadli in 1992-94 war with Armenia.

    The conflict turned to a full-fledged war after the Soviet Union
    collapsed in late 1991, forcing around 700,000 Azerbaijanis to leave
    their homes in the occupied territories.

    Some 300,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis also left their homes in Armenia
    and the same number of ethnic-Armenians had to move from Azerbaijan
    in 1988-90.
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