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OSCE To Discuss 'Frozen Conflicts' At Belgium Meeting

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  • OSCE To Discuss 'Frozen Conflicts' At Belgium Meeting

    OSCE TO DISCUSS 'FROZEN CONFLICTS' AT BELGIUM MEETING
    By Jan Sliva, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 4, 2006 Monday 11:50 AM GMT

    Belgium's foreign minister believes "hope is emerging" for a lasting
    solution to the ongoing conflict in Azerbaijan's Nagorno-Karabakh
    region, as an international security organization opened a conference
    Monday.

    "Frozen" conflicts, or long-lasting disputes in ex-Soviet republics,
    are on the agenda at the two-day meeting of foreign ministers from
    the 56-member Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    The meeting will also assess Kazakhstan's candidacy for 2009
    chairmanship of the trans-Atlantic security group, backed by Russia
    and many other European states but opposed by the United States.

    The group will focus on conflicts in the separatist Georgian
    regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, in the pro-Russian separatist
    Trans-Dniester province of Moldova, and in the Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "Hope is emerging especially as concerning Nagorno-Karabakh," said
    Belgian Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht, whose country holds the
    Vienna, Austria-based OSCE's rotating presidency. "The question of
    frozen conflicts cannot be definitively solved here in Brussels, but
    (all sides) need to restart negotiations that were broken off."

    Armenia and Azerbaijan are discussing terms of holding a referendum on
    the status of the Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous region in Azerbaijan
    that has been under control of Armenian and ethnic Armenian Karabakh
    forces since the 1994 end of a separatist war.

    Years of negotiation have produced little visible sign of progress in
    resolving the dispute, which prompted Azerbaijan to close its borders
    with Armenia. But the presidents of both countries said this week
    that significant progress has been made.

    Goran Lennmarker, chairman of the OSCE's parliamentary assembly,
    described the shift as a 'golden opportunity' which must be seized
    at the meeting.

    The ministers will also debate the application of Kazakhstan to assume
    the rotating one-year chairmanship of the organization in 2009.

    The OSCE is split on Kazakhstan's candidacy, with ex-Soviet republics
    and many other European nations backing it but the United States and
    Britain wary of the Central Asian country's human rights record.

    One possibility, OSCE officials said, would be to push Kazakhstan's
    presidency back to 2011 and press the country to conduct more reforms
    in the meantime. Western nations are eager to increase cooperation
    with Kazakhstan, which has huge natural gas resources, but there is
    concern about the authoritarian rule of President Nursultan Nazarbayev.

    "I fully support Kazakhstan's bid for chairmanship bid," Lennmarker
    said.

    The OSCE, a leading international security organization founded in
    1973, is concerned particularly with conflict prevention, election
    observing, crisis management and rehabilitation of post-conflict areas.
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