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Azerbaijan, Armenia leaders discuss Karabakh conflict settlement

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  • Azerbaijan, Armenia leaders discuss Karabakh conflict settlement

    Azerbaijan, Armenia leaders discuss Karabakh conflict settlement
    By Sevindzh Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    May 16, 2005 Monday

    BAKU, May 16 -- Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia Ilkham Aliyev
    and Robert Kocharyan discussed Karabakh conflict settlement for more
    than three hours in Warsaw on Sunday, Baku television networks report
    from the Polish capital where the Council of Europe summit is held
    on Monday.

    At first, the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia had a tete-a-tete
    meeting, then involving the co-chairmen of the Minsk OSCE group on
    Nagorno Karabakh and the foreign ministers of Russia and France.
    Aliyev and Kocharyan made no statements for the press after the talks.

    However, after a Sunday meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan Ilkham Aliyev told journalists that "Azerbaijan's
    position in the Karabakh conflict settlement remains unchanged."

    "The sides continue negotiations," Aliyev said, noting that "the
    details of the talks are not disclosed under mutual agreements."
    Aliyev noted that he informed the Turkish premier on talks with the
    Armenian president. The president voiced the hope that the Karabakh
    problem will be solved peacefully as a result of the talks.

    Meanwhile, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov who
    participated in the talks told the Baku television network ANS
    from Warsaw by phone that "no revolutionary breakthroughs in the
    negotiating process were made, the sides discuss settlement issues
    within the framework of "the Prague process." "The Prague process"
    is the talks between the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia
    that began in Prague in 2004.

    Before that Aliyev and Kocharyan met at the CIS summit in Astana in
    September 2004.
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