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  • A strange inspection

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    April 18, 2005, Monday

    A STRANGE INSPECTION

    SOURCE: Rossiiskiye Vesti, No. 13, April 14-20, 2005, p. 8

    by Arif Ikramov


    Slovenia's Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel, who is acting OSCE
    president, has visited Baku. He again called for speeding up the talks
    on settlement of the Karabakh problem. According to reports from the
    media agencies based in Baku, Rupel faced a chilling reception in
    this city. He didn't propose any breakthrough decisions to solve the
    inveterate conflict. Rotation is taking place at this post annually
    and each OSCE president has only paid a familiarization visit, writes
    the Zerkalo newspaper.

    A short, but tempestuous diplomatic story of the Karabakh conflict
    indicates that despite OSCE's direct involvement in this process,
    no decisions are available. Setting up the Minsk OSCE Group is the
    main result; this process is only functioning because such large
    powers like the USA, France and Russia are leading it. Many political
    consultants in Baku hold this opinion.

    Nevertheless, the situation in the conflict zone remains tense. The
    talks between the sides have become more frequent, as well as the
    propagandistic war. Some Western and Russian analysts presume that
    serious complications are to come on the "Karabakh front" in the near
    future, not because something extraordinary is taking place. Some of
    them suspect that at the expense of Karabakh the conflicting parties
    are trying to solve their internal problems. This might be the reason
    why Rupel stated that OSCE has worked out remarks concerning the
    democratization of elections in Azerbaijan.

    Of course, these remarks are presented like recommendations. However,
    presumes Arzu Abdulayeva, co-chairperson of the Helsinki Group, OSCE
    begins linking the situation in Karabakh to the internal processes
    in Azerbaijan and Armenia, since elections are coming up in both
    states. If the forecast of this Azerbaijani political analysts
    has real underlying, the time is right to speak about OSCE's policy
    of double standards in the Caucasus, when the concern for Karabakh
    screens sheer targets of conducting so-called "color revolutions"
    in Baku and Yerevan.
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