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Slovene OSCE chairman discusses Nagornyy Karabakh issue in Armenia

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  • Slovene OSCE chairman discusses Nagornyy Karabakh issue in Armenia

    Slovene OSCE chairman discusses Nagornyy Karabakh issue in Armenia

    STA news agency, Ljubljana
    30 Mar 05

    Yerevan, 30 March: Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel, the OSCE
    chairman-in-office, called on all concerned parties to step up efforts
    in a bid to find a solution to the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict as he
    wrapped up his visit to Armenia on Wednesday [30 March].

    After meetings with top Armenian officials, Rupel encouraged all
    parties to take advantage of what he said was "the existing window of
    opportunity" and bolster efforts aimed at finding a solution.

    Speaking to the press after a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister
    Vardan Oskanyan, Rupel said the OSCE - and Slovenia, too - was ready
    to assist in the search for a lasting solution to the
    conflict. According to him, Slovenia could host talks on the issue.

    Oskanyan stressed that the OSCE was playing an important role in
    trying to end the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

    Moreover, Oskanyan said he hoped Rupel would reiterate the stance that
    violations of the cease-fire in Nagornyy Karabakh must stop when he
    visits Azerbaijan on Saturday. Rupel said he intended to do that.

    Apart from Oskanyan, Rupel also met Armenian President Robert
    Kocharyan and Speaker of the National Assembly Artur Bagdasaryan. "I
    am convinced that the guidance of the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan will be crucial for the successful development of the peace
    process," he said after the meeting with the president.

    Earlier in the day, Rupel held talks with the leader of Nagornyy
    Karabakh, Arkadiy Gukasyan, who was less optimistic that a solution to
    the conflict could be found soon, as he is convinced that Azerbaijan's
    position will not change by summer.

    Gukasyan, who is not internationally recognized as the leader of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, stressed that the OSCE's role in solving the
    conflict was very important.

    Asked by an Armenian journalist whether he considers Gukasyan to be a
    tribal leader, since he refers to him as the leader and not the
    president of Nagornyy Karabakh, Rupel said that he was also the leader
    of the OSCE, which does not mean the OSCE is a tribe.

    The simmering conflict in Nagornyy Karabakh, the ethnic-Armenian
    enclave in Azerbaijan, is one of the issues in which the OSCE is
    trying to assist the parties involved to find a peaceful
    solution. Since February 2000, the organization has had its office in
    Yerevan.

    Moreover, Rupel stressed that Armenia had undertaken reforms and urged
    Armenian officials to keep up these efforts. The OSCE, he said, was
    ready to help in several fields, including election reform, the
    freedom of the press and the fight on corruption.

    He also called on the Armenian authorities to continue amending the
    law on elections in order to ensure electoral fairness and
    transparency.

    Pointing to a number of attacks on journalists in Armenia, Rupel said
    the free press was a key factor in the development of a democratic
    society. He said he hopes the authorities would investigate all
    attacks on journalists.

    Rupel is scheduled to travel of Kyrgyzstan later tonight as he
    continues his tour of the Caucasus.
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