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Iran-Azerbaijan: aliyev visit marks new age in relations

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  • Iran-Azerbaijan: aliyev visit marks new age in relations

    ANSA English Media Service
    January 25, 2005

    IRAN-AZERBAIJAN: ALIYEV VISIT MARKS NEW AGE IN RELATIONS

    TEHRAN

    By Alberto Zanconato

    (ANSA) - TEHRAN, January 25 - Iran and Azerbaijan, both
    oil-rich Shiite countries on the Caspian Sea but divided by
    contrasts in interests were trying to turn a new page in their
    relations as Azeri President Ilham Aliyev visited Iran on Tuesday.

    Tehran and Baku should remain side by side, Supreme Leader of
    the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Aliyev on
    receiving him in Tehran.

    Aliyev is on a state visit to the Islamic Republic only five
    months after Iranian President Mohammad Khatami visited
    Azerbaijan.

    The bilateral relations were strained for several years, both
    for the support which Tehran gave Armenia in the war for Nagorno
    Karabakh, an enclave of Armenian majority in Azeri territory,
    and for the division of the waters in the Caspian Sea, 13 years
    after the disintegration of the Soviet Union.

    The problem on the partition of the oil and gas deposits in
    that basin brought the two countries on the brink of an armed
    conflict four years ago when an Iranian military unit intervened
    to block drilling by the Azeris in a contested sea territory.

    "All the problems, including the one on the Caspian Sea, can
    be resolved in a amicable way," Ayatollah Khamenei said.

    He warned Azerbaijan to beware of efforts of foreigners to
    ruin the bilateral relations. That was a reference first of all
    to the United States but also to Israel with which Baku has good
    relations.

    Azerbaijan keeps good relations also with Britain given the
    fact that oil giant BP will lead the consortium of companies
    which will exploit the Azeri oil. That deal should bring in the
    next few years up to $90 billion to the country of eight million
    which went out devastated from the disintegration of the USSR
    and the war for Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia.

    It is exactly on the Nagorno Karabakh issue that the
    bilateral relations could make a decisive improvement.

    Receiving his guest, Khatami used hard words to defend Baku's
    right to regain control of that enclave where more than 10 years
    ago the Armenian majority proclaimed an "independent republic"
    which no one has internationally recognised.

    Answering a question of an Azeri journalist who compared the
    Armenian occupation of Nagorno Karabakh with the Israeli
    occupation of the Palestinian Territories, Khatami said there
    were obvious differences but the occupation of only one
    centrimetre from other's territory should be condemned and the
    international community should help put an end to the occupation.

    That statement was a decisive step ahead after Baku had
    accused Tehran for years of having lined up with a Christian
    country in a conflict against a Muslim Shiite nation which cost
    Azerbaijan at least 30,000 deaths and one million refugees who
    moved to other parts of the country.

    The war and the fall of the USSR made the Azeri gross
    domestic product (GDP) fall by 60 percent between 1990 and 1995.

    Aliyev thanked the Iranian authorities but also underlined
    the complexity of the issue when he wished peace and stability
    would return to the region but only after the rights of the
    Azeri people will be recognised.

    Azerbaijan has still to settle the issue on the Caspian Sea
    with Iran which has not recognised the agreements between
    Azerbaijan, Russia and Kazakhstan to which Turkmenistan could
    also join.

    Tehran was further annoyed by Azerbaijan's decision to export
    crude oil via a pipeline for $3 billion which will run through
    Georgia and arrive at Turkey's Mediterranean coast. That project
    which has to start operation next summer excluded Iran as a
    possible route for Azerbaijan's oil sales abroad. (ANSA).
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