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BAKU: ICG Reveals Report On Karabakh

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  • BAKU: ICG Reveals Report On Karabakh

    ICG REVEALS REPORT ON DAGHLIG GARABAGH

    Azerbaijan News Service
    Sept 15 2005

    All sides in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict need to prepare their people
    for peace much better if the seeds of their high-level negotiations
    are to bear fruit. Nagorno-Karabakh: Viewing the Conflict from the
    Ground,* the latest report from the International Crisis Group,
    explores how the Armenians and Azeris from Nagorno-Karabakh and
    the surrounding districts live and how they view the resolution of
    the conflict. Despite signs of progress at internationally mediated
    negotiations (to be discussed in a subsequent report), rising military
    expenditures and increasing ceasefire violations are ominous signs
    that time for a peaceful settlement may be running out. The brutal war
    over Nagorno-Karabakh killed some 18,500 people and displaced over a
    million before settling into a shaky cease-fire in 1994. Eleven years
    on, life in Nagorno-Karabakh has regained some sense of normality with
    a developing economy and elected institutions. Yet nothing has been
    done to restore rights of war victims. The creation of mono-ethnic
    institutions in Nagorno-Karabakh, the destruction of Azeri property,
    and the privatisation of land and businesses pose significant obstacles
    to Azeri return and reintegration. Many displaced persons have become
    highly dependent on the Azerbaijani state, with few opportunities
    to participate fully in political life and determine their own
    future. Refusing to allow dialogue and demonising Armenians through
    the state-sponsored media and schools, Baku has hardened anti-Armenian
    feeling among average citizens. The Azerbaijanis and Armenians are
    as separated as they have ever been. "There is need to counter the
    hate propaganda and unlock the potential for confidence building and
    dialogue between average Azeris and Armenians", says Sabine Freizer,
    Director of Crisis Group's Caucasus Project. "This has to happen
    before the memories of cohabitation fade and the divide becomes
    unbridgeable". Neither community appears prepared to agree to the
    kind of settlement being considered by the Armenian and Azerbaijani
    foreign ministers in the negotiations sponsored by the Organisation
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). "The vast majority
    of those affected by the conflict have been kept in the dark about
    the details of the negotiations", says Alain Deletroz, Crisis Group's
    Vice President for Europe. "But there is no way for any peace process
    to succeed unless leaders from all sides start actively selling the
    idea to their people".
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