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Baku will not admit Armenia's representatives for participation inNA

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  • Baku will not admit Armenia's representatives for participation inNA

    BAKU WILL NOT ADMIT ARMENIA'S REPRESENTATIVES FOR PARTICIPATION IN NATO-LED EXERCISE

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Sept 13 2004

    BAKU, September 13 (RIA Novosti) - The Azerbaijani embassy in Georgia
    will not issue entrance visas to Armenia's military for participation
    in the NATO-led Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercise in Baku, said
    Metin Mirza, head of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry's press service.

    "The Azerbaijani embassy in Georgia has not and will not issue
    entrance visas to Armenia's military for participation in the NATO-led
    Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercise", he said.

    In response to the question on the reasons of the refusal, Mr. Mirza
    said that "these reasons are well-known and there is no need in
    voicing them again".

    The NATO exercise to be attended by representatives of the alliance's
    20 countries and partners within the framework of the NATO program
    Partnership for Peace will be held in Baku from September 14 through
    26.

    Political organizations and public of Azerbaijan as well as the
    country's mass media speak out against participation of the Armenian
    representatives in the exercise. In particular, the Azerbaijani
    parliament's address to the NATO Secretary General reads that the NATO
    leadership's decision on invitation of "officers of the occupational
    Armenian army" to the military exercise was taken extremely negative
    in the republic.

    "It is absolutely obvious that this decision, whose consequences has
    not been thoroughly considered, may ultimately aggravate the tense
    situation in the region", states the address.

    It also points out that the Azerbaijani people voice strong protest
    against this decision of the NATO leadership and see it as "a step,
    to chose the words carefully, absolutely inconsistent with interest
    of our state and hurting feelings of Azerbaijani citizens".

    Addressing the fact that over 20 thousand Armenians currently live
    in Baku, the Azerbaijani MPs point out that "the protests against
    arrival of Armenia's officers in Baku are not only ethnically based.
    The protests are against arrival in the capital of occupied Azerbaijan
    of officers of the aggressive Armenian army, which seized the
    Azerbaijani lands and sentenced its residents to incredible sorrows".

    The address of the parliament's members to the NATO Secretary General
    expressed hope that "this ill-considered decision, which may impair the
    NATO-Azerbaijani cooperation and threaten the talks towards peaceful
    settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, will be cancelled".

    All capitals of the Southern Caucasus and other countries pinned
    their hopes on election of Ilkham Aliev the Azerbaijani president in
    terms of intensifying the process of the peaceful settlement of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over belonging of Nagorny Karabakh,
    Armenian enclave on the Azerbaijani territory. However, no visible
    changes to the better have been seen, despite all endeavours of
    intermediaries represented by the OSCE Minsk Group. The reason for
    this lies in the irreconcilable position of the sides: Baku has no
    intentions to put up with the loss of its territory (alongside with
    the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorny Karabakh, a substantial
    portion of the Azerbaijani original territories are still under
    control of the Armenian troops) and appeals to the international
    law, declaring primacy of territorial integrity to nation's right to
    self-determination. Stepanakert's authorities intend to retain the
    current status of an 'independent' state and feel Erevan's support
    in this.
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