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98.6% Of Nagorno Karabakh's Voters Choose Independence

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  • 98.6% Of Nagorno Karabakh's Voters Choose Independence

    98.6% OF NAGORNO KARABAKH'S VOTERS CHOOSE INDEPENDENCE

    Tiraspol Times & Weekly Review, Moldova
    Dec 11 2006

    Voters in unrecognized Nagorno Karabakh went to the polls Sunday
    to confirm their wish for independence. Nearly 99% approved a new
    constitution declaring NKR an independent country. The result of the
    vote echoes a similar referendum held in Pridnestrovie in September.

    The government of Nagorno-Karabakh has been de facto independent
    for more than 15 years, with U.S. and Armenian support STEPANAKERT
    (Tiraspol Times) - The population of Nagorno-Karabakh has
    overwhelmingly approved a new pro-independence constitution, returns
    from a Sunday referendum showed. According to official preliminary
    figures released on Monday, 98.6 percent of voters approved the
    constitution, which describes Karabakh as a sovereign state. Turnout
    was 87.2 percent.

    " - The constitution is adopted and December 10 from now can be
    declared as a Constitution Day," election commission chief Sergey
    Nasibyan told Reuters by telephone.

    The vote was held on the 15th anniversary of a referendum in which
    Karabakh, which split from Azerbaijan in a 1990s war that killed
    35,000 people, declared independence.

    The conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous territory about
    half the size of Cyprus, is still unresolved. The majority of people
    in Nagorno-Karabakh are Christian ethnic Armenians who associate
    themselves with neighboring Armenia rather than Azerbaijan, a majority
    Muslim state.

    The new plebiscite sends an important signal to the rest of the
    world of a commitment to continued de facto independence by the young
    country. A political expert explains that its "Soviet-style" result
    of nearly 100% approval is not surprising, in view of the animosity
    between the two sides in the conflict and the lives that were lost
    in the war for independence.

    The Nagorno Karabakh vote echoes a similar referendum where
    Pridnestrovie voted 97% in favor of independence on 17 September. In
    that vote, more than 94% also rejected unification with Moldova,
    making it clear to the world that future talks of a joint state are
    fruitless and that the wounds from the Moldovan 1992 invasion of
    Pridnestrovie have not yet healed.

    Like Moldova, Azerbaijan calls a basic human right "illegitimate"
    Azerbaijan and the so-called "international community" do not
    recognize the right of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh's to live in
    independence. Azerbaijan is determined to restore its control over the
    country, whose population has repeatedly said that it does not accept
    to live under Azerbaijan. An official statement from Azerbaijan said
    that the referendum was illegitimate, copying a phrase which Moldova a
    few days earlier had used to describe the peaceful democratic election
    in neighboring Pridnestrovie.

    " - But how can it be illegitimate for us to simply express our vote,
    peacefully and democratically?" asked a resident as she went to the
    polls. "It is not as if we are killing anyone, which is what they do
    when they want to impose their rule on a people that doesn't want it.

    Democracy can never be illegitimate. It is a basic human rights."

    The fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh was the bloodiest of the
    independence wars that broke out when the Soviet Union disintegrated.

    A fragile ceasefire has been in force since 1994 but there are still
    occasional exchanges of gunfire.

    Ethnic clashes in the late 1980s escalated after the collapse of the
    Soviet Union into full-scale fighting. Though Azerbaijan lost that war,
    it is now threatening a new military campaign to crush the dream of
    freedom of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh if stalled peace talks
    do not soon produce the results that Azerbaijan wants.

    Nagorno-Karabakh differs from other "frozen conflicts" in the ex-Soviet
    Union in that it has repeatedly received funding from the United
    States Congress. Throughout the 1990s, NKR's independence leaders
    collaborated with other unrecognized countries but at the advice of
    American consultants, they withdrew their close ties.

    Washington felt that it was not beneficial for NKR to be lumped with
    Abkhazia and Pridnestrovie (Transdniester), and the consultants held
    out the promise of quick international independence recognition if
    Nagorno-Karabakh would seek its own way.

    No such promise materialized, and Nagorno-Karabakh is now again
    inching closer to the other unrecognized countries in the region.

    Pridnestrovie had representatives at the vote Representatives from
    Pridnestrovie, or Transnistria as some call it, were on the scene in
    NKR during Sunday's vote.

    " - We have come here, first of all, in order to support the people
    of Nagorno Karabakh, who came to the referendum to express their
    thirst for freedom. The result of the referendum is already known:
    the people of Nagorno Karabakh confirmed their desire to live
    independently and freely, and we congratulate them for that," one of
    the representatives of Tiraspol, the PMR Member of Parliament Lubomir
    Rybyak, told reporters in Stepanakert.

    " - We visited a small Karabakh village not far from the Iranian
    border. I went up to two elderly women and introduced myself. One of
    the women hugged me and said: 'You are our brothers.' I was amazed and
    touched that in such a remote village they know about Pridnestrovie,"
    Lubomir Rybyak said. In his opinion, the national referendum for
    approving and adopting the new Nagorno Karabakh Constitution was held
    in accordance with international norms.

    Few countries in the world use the figure of a nationwide democratic
    referendum to approve a Constitution. Pridnestrovie did so in 1995,
    as one of the first of its time. Venezuela did it in 1998, and now,
    in 2006, Nagorno Karabakh has successfully done it, too. (With
    information from Reuters; Regnum)

    http://www.tiraspoltimes.com/node/434
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