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Putin: Moscow ready to act as intermediary in solutions in S. Cauc.

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  • Putin: Moscow ready to act as intermediary in solutions in S. Cauc.

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Jan 11 2005

    PUTIN: MOSCOW READY TO ACT AS INTERMEDIARY IN SOLUTION OF CONFLICTS
    IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS


    MOSCOW, January 11 (RIA Novosti) - Russia will act in the settlement
    of Karabakh conflict and relations between Turkey and Armenia only as
    an intermediary, stated Vladimir Putin during a meeting with Turkish
    businessmen in Moscow.

    Answering a question posed by the Turkish media, the Russian
    President announced that during the meeting the sides did not discuss
    the Karabakh problem. "We touched upon general issues of relations
    between countries in the region - Russia and Armenia, Armenia and
    Turkey," Mr. Putin said.

    Both sides, he stated, expressed the desire to establish friendly
    relations among neighbors.

    "Russia will do everything possible to settle the conflicts remaining
    on the post-Soviet space, including the long-lasting Karabakh
    conflict," Mr. Putin announced. "However, we will do it only as an
    intermediary and guarantor of agreements which are going to be
    reached by conflicting sides."

    The ceasefire agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which has
    been lasting for more than ten years, and the involvement of
    international intermediaries in the framework of the OSCE Minsk group
    did not bring the sides any closer to the final solution of the
    conflict. Baku insists on the primacy of territorial integrity, the
    return of self-proclaimed Nagorny-Karabakh republic to the
    jurisdiction of Azerbaijan and the withdrawal of Armenian
    (occupation) forces.

    The Turkish Prime Minister, in his turn, called for future
    improvement of relations with Armenia.

    He reminded that Turkey has already opened the Istanbul airport for
    flights from Armenia. The land border is still closed and its opening
    will depend on the progress of negotiations between the two
    countries, the Turkish Prime Minister underlined.

    He stressed that Turkey was interested in the development of
    relations with Armenia. "We do not wish to have resentful neighbors,"
    he stated.

    The Armenian authorities demand that Ankara officially apologize for
    the genocide of Armenianpeople (according to Yerevan) committed by
    the Ottoman Empire in 1915.
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