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Azerbaijan: A road, if not a referendum, for Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • Azerbaijan: A road, if not a referendum, for Nagorno-Karabakh

    AZERBAIJAN: A ROAD, IF NOT A REFERENDUM, FOR NAGORNO-KARABAKH
    Shahin Abbasov 8/17/05

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Aug 17 2005

    Expectations are running high in Baku that an upcoming meeting between
    the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia can achieve a breakthrough
    in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.

    President Ilham Aliyev and President Robert Kocharian of Armenia are
    scheduled to hold a summit on August 26 in the Russian city of Kazan,
    on the sidelines of a Commonwealth of Independent States gathering.
    Some media outlets in Baku have reported that the two could sign
    a declaration in Kazan outlining a possible Karabakh settlement.
    Officials, however, have refused to confirm these reports. "The
    maximum we can expect from the meeting in Kazan is a statement by the
    presidents in which they would order their foreign ministers to start
    working on the text of a future agreement," one senior government
    official told EurasiaNet, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    Not all Baku analysts predict even that degree of progress. Ilgar
    Mamedov, an independent political analyst, suggested that both Aliyev
    and Kocharian could be posturing in an effort to curry the favor of
    Western governments and international organizations. Both presidents
    will soon face crucial political tests at home - parliamentary
    elections in Azerbaijan and a constitutional referendum in Armenia -
    and both leaders don't want to do anything at this delicate point
    that would undermine their respective international standing. [For
    additional information see the Eurasia Insight archive]. International
    mediators have pushed hard in recent months to promote a Karabakh
    solution. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    "The recent wave of optimism could have been predicted a long time ago
    based on previous experience of the connection between elections and
    the negotiation process," said Mamedov. "The so-called 'Prague process'
    will diminish in importance after the forthcoming November elections
    in Azerbaijan and referendum in Armenia." The "Prague process" refers
    to the regular meetings between Azerbaijan and Armenia's foreign
    ministers and the co-chairs of the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation's Minsk Group, the tripartite body charged with mediating
    a conflict resolution. [For additional information see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Government officials, however, reject such a view. While saying that
    he is "far from euphoric on the chances for reaching peace soon,"
    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tahir Tagizade commented that "we can
    say that there is real mutual progress on the negotiations." Recent
    charges that Armenian special services participated in a supposed coup
    plot against the Aliyev administration, along with the leader of a
    pro-opposition Azerbaijani youth group, appear to have done little to
    dispel that optimism. Armenian officials have denied any involvement
    in a coup plot. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Baku remains insistent on a so-called "step by step" settlement
    for the Karabakh conflict, Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told
    journalists on July 21. Under this approach, Karabakh's territorial
    status would be defined only after Armenian forces withdraw from
    seven occupied Azerbaijani regions and communications between the two
    counties are restored. [For additional information see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. Demilitarizing the conflict zone, clearing mines, the
    return of refugees and the provision of security guarantees are among
    other measures that would be implemented. The possible installation
    of peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh is seen as the final issue
    for agreement, according to Mammadyarov. "And any status is possible
    only within the framework of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity,"
    the foreign minister added.

    Resolving Karabakh's future territorial status is possible "freely and
    democratically," only after the successful implementation of all the
    above measures, according to one senior government official who spoke
    with EurasiaNet on condition of anonymity, "However the implementation
    of all the discussed stages could require years," the official noted.

    As part of this "free and democratic" process, the official said,
    a referendum on Karabakh's status could be considered. When a
    referendum was proposed during negotiations in Yerevan in mid-July,
    the Azerbaijani government reacted negatively. The issue is reportedly
    to be finally resolved during the meeting between Aliyev and Kocharian.

    Many Azerbaijani experts and media pundits are opposed to a
    referendum. Eldar Namazov, a former presidential aide and one of the
    leaders of the YeS opposition alliance, argued that agreeing to a
    referendum would go against Azerbaijan's national interests. "There
    is no way to conduct a referendum in the occupied territories and
    every single attempt to do so is doomed," Namazov said.

    Vafa Guluzade, a retired Azerbaijani diplomat, said Azerbaijan did not
    need to agree to a referendum to secure a peace deal. "The Armenians
    have already conducted a referendum and no doubt that they will vote
    for independence again," Guluzade told Turan.

    A further snag looms just over the horizon. Azerbaijan's constitution
    dictates that any referendum held in the country must be held
    nationwide, noted Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov in comments
    to reporters. If Azerbaijan sees Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan,
    any question on its status must be submitted to Azerbaijanis outside
    of the territory as well. Otherwise, in Azimov's words, a referendum
    will be impossible.

    One sweetener, however, has already been put on the table. Azerbaijan
    has proposed opening a new motorway that would link the Azerbaijani
    town of Agdam (located in Armenian-occupied territory) with the
    Karabakh capital Stepanakert, and from there, to the Azerbaijani
    exclave of Nakhichivan. According to Azerbaijani officials, the road
    would ensure reliable links between Armenia and Karabakh, and also
    between Azerbaijan and its Nakhichivan exclave.

    "This project could make the South Caucasus a united region from the
    political point of view and would encourage regional cooperation,"
    said an official who spoke on condition of anonymity. If implemented,
    Armenia and Azerbaijan would each provide security for their section
    of the road.

    The security issue was discussed in mid-July in Baku between the Minsk
    Group's co-chairs and leaders of the remaining Azerbaijani community
    in Karabakh, Nizami Bakhmanov and Elbrus Takhmazov. One proposal,
    supported by Bakhmanov, would see OSCE peacekeepers provide for the
    road's security, with traffic following a pre-determined schedule --
    a practice employed in Bosnia in the 1990s.

    The catch, however, could lie in Lachin, which contains the road that
    connects Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia. Azerbaijan remains adamant
    that Armenia not retain control of the territory. "Lachin is part of
    Azerbaijan and there is no way for the region to stay under Armenian
    control," Azimov said in a July 15 interview with ATV television.

    Azerbaijan is calling for the resettlement of the Armenian population
    from Lachin. "For the last 100 years, Armenians did not live in Lachin,
    so that they have to be resettled," said Bakhmanov. "But compensation
    to these people could be paid," he added, citing the findings of a
    report by an international fact-finding mission earlier this year.

    Commenting on the Armenian side's concerns about the security
    of Karabakh's Armenian population after the return of Azerbaijani
    residents, Bakhmanov stated that the return of a "peaceful population
    without arms" to Lachin and Shusha, a city strongly tied to Azerbaijani
    culture, is "in itself is a guarantee of security."

    In July, the Russian Minsk Group co-chairman Yuri Merzlyakov
    lauded Armenia and Azerbaijan for "showing their willingness for
    compromise." Even so, many international observers are restrained in
    their expectations for the peace process. A resolution to the conflict
    "could be settled by the end of the year, or may not be settled for
    100 years," commented Steven Mann, US co-chair of the Minsk Group,
    on July 21. It all depends "on the will of the government and the
    people of the two nations."

    Editor's Note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance journalist based in Baku.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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