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BAKU: Azerbaijan, Armenia to hold 'Make-or-break' talks

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  • BAKU: Azerbaijan, Armenia to hold 'Make-or-break' talks

    Azer News, Azerbaijan
    Sept 16 2004

    Azerbaijan, Armenia to hold 'Make-or-break' talks

    Talks next week between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan could
    make or break the fragile peace process between the two countries,
    President Ilham Aliyev said Saturday.

    Aliyev is scheduled to meet face-to-face with his Armenian
    counterpart Robert Kocharian within a CIS summit due to commence on
    September 15 in Astana, Kazakhstan. President Aliyev said the meeting
    could be a breakthrough after a decade of unsuccessful negotiations
    which followed a war between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the early
    1990s over Upper Garabagh. "A lot depends on the meeting in Astana,"
    Aliyev said during his visit to Barda, north-western Azerbaijan.

    "It could bring clarity to the question of where we are, whether we
    are getting closer to an agreement or whether we are going in the
    opposite direction." "Now there is a chance to determine the road map
    for achieving an agreement. This is the main thing: real, fundamental
    negotiations will start only after that." Aliyev added: "First of all
    we must agree on the principles. If we achieve that, afterwards the
    detailed negotiations can get underway." Defense Minister Safar
    Abiyev, in a meeting with the outgoing Russian Ambassador Nikolay
    Ryabov, said the Azeri people expect the upcoming meeting of
    Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents to yield results in settling the
    Upper Garabagh conflict. Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a five-year
    war over Upper Garabagh. Some 35,000 people were killed and about one
    million civilians displaced by the fighting. The conflict ended with
    Armenian forces in control of Upper Garabagh, which is
    internationally recognized as a part of Azerbaijan. Though a fragile
    ceasefire is in force, the two sides are still officially in a state
    of war. Azerbaijan has threatened to renew hostilities unless peace
    talks produce results soon.
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