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Armenian Foreign Minister Expresses Optimism For Progress OnNagorno-

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  • Armenian Foreign Minister Expresses Optimism For Progress OnNagorno-

    ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER EXPRESSES OPTIMISM FOR PROGRESS ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH
    Avet Demourian

    AP Worldstream
    Apr 05, 2006

    Armenia expressed optimism Wednesday that progress could be made
    toward a settlement of its dispute with Azerbaijan over the status of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave despite the breakdown in talks between
    the two countries' presidents earlier this year.

    "The negotiations must be continued and what we have on the table
    today must be used as the basis," Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
    said at a meeting with Peter Semneby, the European Union's special
    representative in the South Caucasus region.

    He said there could be no military solution to the dispute, which
    sparked a six-year war that ended with a shaky cease-fire in 1994,
    and urged Azerbaijan to accept that mutual compromise was necessary.

    "Armenia has already made all possible compromises, there is no place
    left to step back," he said. "The time has come for Azerbaijan to
    take steps so that we can get this (negotiation) process moving and
    bring it to completion." Semneby urged the two sides to act soon to
    get talks under way again. "Indeed, there is a window of opportunity,
    which we need to take advantage of," he said.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is inside Azerbaijan but populated mostly by ethnic
    Armenians, whose troops face Azerbaijani forces across a half-mile-wide
    (kilometer-wide) no man's land. Clashes break out sporadically and
    Armenian President Robert Kocharian and Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliev have traded increasingly bellicose statements since talks to
    resolve the enclave's status broke down in February.

    At least 30,000 people have been killed and 1 million made refugees in
    the 18-year-old dispute. The hostilities have also hindered investment
    in the strategic, oil-rich Caucasus region.

    A decade of international mediation has failed to end the conflict.

    The dispute has dominated both countries' foreign policy since they
    became independent with the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

    Foreign mediators have been pushing for a resolution of the conflict
    this year. Since neither country will have elections, their leaders
    should be free of domestic pressure to stand tough on Karabakh,
    the mediators have said.
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