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  • Nagorno-Karabakh Talks Moving in Right Direction

    Nagorno-Karabakh Talks Moving in Right Direction
    by MARGARET BESHEER

    Voice of America News
    June 16, 2005

    WASHINGTON -- INTRO: The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    plan to meet Friday in Paris to discuss ways to settle the conflict
    over the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan. In
    Washington, VOA's Margaret Besheer looks at the recent history of the
    conflict and gets a sense from experts on where this round of talks
    might go.

    In 1988, the people of Nagorno-Karabakh began their liberation
    movement. Three years later, they held a referendum and declared
    their independence from Azerbaijan, although their government is not
    internationally recognized.

    Heavy fighting followed, with Armenian forces supporting the
    Nagorno-Karabakh army. A Russian-mediated cease-fire ended the worst
    of the fighting in 1994. Thousands of people had lost their lives
    in the fighting and some 300 thousand Armenians had become refugees,
    while nearly a million Azeris had been expelled from Nagorno-Karabakh
    and had become displaced in their own country.

    Sabine Freizer, the Caucasus project director for the International
    Crisis Group, spoke to VOA from a noisy street corner in the Azeri
    city of Ganja. She says the Armenians and Azeris define the conflict
    differently.

    [FREIZER ACT 1]

    "The Azeris consider that the origins of the conflict are territorial
    claims that Armenia has on Azerbaijan territory. While the Armenians
    consider that the conflict is about national self-determination and
    the right of Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh to express their
    will for sovereignty."

    [END ACT]

    International efforts to mediate the dispute have been mostly limited
    to the work of the Minsk Group created by the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe. Again, Sabine Freizer.

    [FREIZER ACT 2]

    "The Minsk Group is the main and only international organization
    which is facilitating dialogue at the state level between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan. Currently there are three co-chairs, France, Russia,
    and the United States."

    [END ACT]

    So far, the Minsk Group has been unsuccessful in proposing a single
    solution agreeable to both Armenia and Azerbaijan. But as Azerbaijan
    expert and Jamestown Foundation correspondent Fariz Ismailzade tells
    VOA from Baku, the two sides are still considering parts of two Minsk
    Group proposals.

    [ISMAILZADE ACT 1]

    "The Azeris are supporting a so-called step-by-step proposal,
    which means the territories around the disputed NK province will
    be liberated. And the refugees and displaced people, these are the
    Azerbaijanis, will go back, and then the status of Nagorno-Karabakh
    will be decided. The Armenians are proposing to solve all the issues
    at the same time. This is called a package proposal. They want return
    of refugees and liberation of occupied territories to be done at the
    same time with the status of disputed Nagorno-Karabakh."

    [END ACT]

    Last month the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan met on the
    sidelines of the Council of Europe summit in Warsaw. Mr. Ismailzade
    explains why that meeting was important for the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict.

    [/ ISMAILZADE ACT 2]

    "The presidents met and decided, 'yes, we are on the right track,
    let's continue this negotiation.' So in a way, the presidents gave a
    new mandate, a new opportunity for the [foreign] ministers to continue
    the talks."

    [END ACT]

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian says he hopes to build on
    the progress made in Warsaw.

    [OSKANIAN ACT]

    "During the two presidents meeting in Warsaw, certain progress was made
    on one of the most critical items. I will meet with my counterpart from
    Azerbaijan on the 17th (of June). We will try to build on the progress
    that the two presidents have made during their meeting in Warsaw."

    [END ACT]

    Absent at the negotiating table Friday will be a direct representative
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh people. Their representative in the United
    States, Vardan Barseghian, says they still welcome Friday's peace
    talks.

    [BARSEGHIAN ACT]

    "Our president says he welcomes this kind of discussion, but to achieve
    a long-lasting resolution, Nagorno-Karabakh should be present at the
    negotiating table."

    [END ACT]

    Ms. Freizer of the International Crisis Group says the Paris talks
    are a continuation of a process which has been moving in a positive
    direction, but she does not expect there to be a major breakthrough
    at Friday's meeting.

    [FREIZER ACT 3]

    "It seems that there is good will on both sides to talk about very
    hard issues. But at this point, it looks like they are still in a
    negotiation phase where they are still hashing out ideas and trying
    to come to a consensus on the key ideas."

    [END ACT]

    Mr. Ismailzade of the Jamestown Foundation agrees.

    [ISMAILZADE ACT 3]

    "They will come out of that saying that they have discussed some
    details, things are in a right direction, they are narrowing down
    their positions, and they will continue negotiations."

    [END ACT]

    No matter what comes out of the Paris meeting, Mr. Barseghian of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh people says their goal will remain unchanged,
    and that is to have an independent state where their people can live
    in freedom and choose their own government. (SIGNED)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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