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No Karabakh Accord Announced After Armenian-Azeri Summit

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  • No Karabakh Accord Announced After Armenian-Azeri Summit

    NO KARABAKH ACCORD ANNOUNCED AFTER ARMENIAN-AZERI SUMMIT

    Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 29 2005

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have made contradictory statements on their
    presidents' weekend meeting in Russia which international mediators
    hoped will mark a turning point in their protracted search for a
    solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Presidents Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliev did not speak to
    journalists after their talks in the Russian city of Kazan on Saturday
    and it is not known if they reached any formal or informal agreements
    on Karabakh. Reports from Kazan said the two leaders conferred in
    a tete-a-tete format for an hour before being joined by French,
    Russian and U.S. diplomats spearheading the peace process.

    Kocharian, according to his spokesman Victor Soghomonian, came away
    satisfied from the meeting held on the sidelines of a summit of the
    Commonwealth of Independent States. "The Armenian side assesses the
    meeting in Kazan positively and considers it a positive development in
    the negotiating process," the Itar-Tass news agency quoted Soghomonian
    as saying.

    The official added that Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov of
    Azerbaijan and Vartan Oskanian of Armenia will continue that process
    "based on the agreements reached in Kazan." He did not say what those
    agreements are.

    "In general, I cannot say that there has been any major progress
    or breakthrough," Mammadyarov said for his part, according to the
    Azerbaijani ANS television. "We did not reach any agreement."

    "I think that we, both Armenia and Azerbaijan, need a couple of weeks
    to analyze the thoughts voiced by the two sides and think what the
    results may be and whether we are prepared for any progress or not,"
    he added.

    Mammadyarov and Oskanian held talks in Moscow earlier in the week to
    prepare for the Armenian-Azerbaijani summit and appeared satisfied
    with their results. Highlighting the importance of the Kazan meeting,
    U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice telephoned Aliev and Kocharian
    on Thursday to urge them to make mutual concessions that will pave
    the way for a Karabakh peace deal.

    Diplomatic sources in Yerevan told RFE/RL last month that the parties
    have already agreed on the key points of a peace deal that could be
    formalized as early as this year or at the beginning of next. They
    said it is based on the idea of a referendum in which the Karabakh
    Armenians will decide whether they want to be independent, become a
    part of Armenia or return under Azerbaijani rule. Speaking to RFE/RL
    in Moscow last week, Mammadyarov admitted that such a peace formula
    is being discussed by the parties.

    Regional observers believe that Aliev and Kocharian will not announce
    any compromise deals until November which will see parliamentary
    elections in Azerbaijan and a constitutional referendum in Armenia.
    It is widely assumed that opposition groups in both countries would
    exploit unpopular concessions on Karabakh in their struggle against
    the ruling regimes.

    The Karabakh peace process has always been highly confidential.
    Kocharian and Aliev's late predecessor and father Heydar, for example,
    did not announce any agreements after a meeting in Paris in March
    2001. But Armenian officials claimed afterward that the two presidents
    agreed on the key principles of a peace accord that nearly ended the
    bitter dispute.
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