Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

OSCE Sees New Hope For Karabakh Peace

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • OSCE Sees New Hope For Karabakh Peace

    OSCE SEES NEW HOPE FOR KARABAKH PEACE
    By Emil Danielyan and Harry Tamrazian in Prague

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 4 2006

    The settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict may again be on the
    cards following the latest meeting of the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, senior officials from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe said on Monday.

    "Hope is emerging especially as concerning Nagorno-Karabakh,"
    the OSCE's chairman-in-office, Belgian Foreign Minister Karel De
    Gucht, was reported to declare in Brussels as he opened a meeting of
    foreign ministers of 56 nations making up the Transatlantic security
    organization.

    The unresolved conflicts in Karabakh and elsewhere in the former
    Soviet Union are high on the agenda of the two-day conference. De
    Gucht, whose country holds the OSCE's rotating presidency, urged
    fellow ministers to give a new impetus to protracted international
    efforts to resolve those disputes.

    The Belgian official was present, along with his Russian counterpart
    Sergey Lavrov, at the opening of crucial talks between Presidents
    Ilham Aliev and Robert Kocharian that took place in the Belarusian
    capital Minsk last Tuesday. Both presidents indicated afterwards that
    they made further progress towards a mutually acceptable peace accord,
    with Aliev saying that the Karabakh negotiating process is nearing its
    "final stage."

    Goran Lennmarker, chairman of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly,
    was quoted by the Associated Press news agency as saying that the
    Aliev-Kocharian encounter has created a "golden opportunity" for
    Karabakh peace which must be seized at the Brussels meeting.

    Addressing the gathering, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
    agreed that the conflicting parties are now close to cutting a
    compromise peace deal. "The last meeting of presidents gives hope
    that agreement is possible even on the most problematic issues on
    which we don't see eye to eye," he said.

    Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said late last
    week that the parties have reached agreement on all but one of a
    dozen basic principles of the conflict's resolution that have been
    suggested by American, French and Russian diplomats co-heading the
    OSCE's so-called Minsk Group.

    Oskanian, however, seemed to deny this as he spoke with RFE/RL by
    phone later on Monday. "I am not sure that there remains only one
    [unresolved] issue," he said.

    "Of course, our positions are now close on some difficult issues,"
    he added. "But since these negotiations are multi-layered -- there
    are principles and details -- it is really hard to say that we have
    agreed on eight principles and need to agree only one more principle.

    I find it difficult to say that."

    The most important of those principles is a referendum on
    Karabakh's final status that would take place after the liberation of
    Armenian-occupied districts in Azerbaijan proper. Oskanian indicated
    the parties still disagree on important practical modalities of the
    proposed vote, saying that Azerbaijan has yet to fully accept the
    Karabakh Armenians' "right to self-determination."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X