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  • Confidence Measures, Referendum Needed To Solve Karabakh Dispute:Thi

    CONFIDENCE MEASURES, REFERENDUM NEEDED TO SOLVE KARABAKH DISPUTE: THINKTANK

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 11, 2005 Tuesday 4:23 PM GMT

    An influential Western thinktank proposed a package of
    confidence-building measures on Tuesday it said should lead to
    a referendum on the status of the disputed Caucasus territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The International Crisis Group (ICG) said there remained a risk of a
    resumption of large-scale conflict 11 years after a 1994 ceasefire
    ended a war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the territory that
    claimed some 25,000 lives.

    "So far, despite progress in the negotiations, the resumption of war
    remains as likely as peace," the Brussels-based group's European Vice
    President, Alain Deletroz, said in a statement introducing a 40-page
    report on the dispute.

    The measures it proposed include a withdrawal of Armenia-backed
    Nagorno-Karabakh troops from districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh
    and the renunciation by Azerbaijan of the possibility of using force
    to take control of the territory.

    The voluntary return of displaced persons would also be a crucial
    element, as would investigations of war crimes, under the plan proposed
    by the group.

    In endorsing such measures, Armenia and Azerbaijan should also agree
    the mechanism for an eventual referendum on the territory's status,
    in which only Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians and Azeris would participate,
    the ICG said.

    The risk of a return to armed conflict was symbolised, the thinktank
    said, by a "line of contact" on which are stationed some 18,500
    Nagorno-Karabakh soldiers, half of them estimated to be from Armenia,
    and 30,000 to 45,000 Azerbaijani fighters.

    "Nothing has been done on the ground to build confidence and trust,
    demilitarise and demobilise, or resume trade and communications,"
    the report read.

    Agreement to hold a later referendum "is the crucial ingredient in
    a viable peace process," it continued.

    Despite the failure to achieve a settlement, the ICG said both sides
    had shown signs of flexibility in recent years that should eventually
    enable a final status referendum.
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