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Aliev Again Rejects Karabakh Independence

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  • Aliev Again Rejects Karabakh Independence

    ALIEV AGAIN REJECTS KARABAKH INDEPENDENCE
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 21 2006

    Azerbaijan will never agree to any peaceful settlement that would
    fail to restore its control over Nagorno-Karabakh, President Ilham
    Aliev reiterated on Thursday.

    "Nagorno-Karabakh will never be granted independence," Azerbaijani
    news agencies quoted him as saying during a visit to the Azerbaijani
    exclave of Nakhichevan.

    Aliev said the Karabakh Armenians should settle for a status of
    autonomy within Azerbaijan now or risk being offered no self-rule
    at all in the future. He again claimed that Armenia will find it
    increasingly hard to compete with his oil-rich nation.

    "Azerbaijan's state budget is seven times bigger than Armenia's,
    and its military budget equals that country's entire budget," he said.

    The most recent peace plan put forward by French, Russian and U.S.
    mediators appears to allow for the possibility of international
    recognition of Karabakh's secession from Azerbaijan. It would enable
    Karabakh's predominantly Armenian population to determine the disputed
    territory's status in a referendum.

    Despite their diametrically opposite positions on Karabakh's status,
    the conflicting parties claim to have made considerable progress
    towards a compromise solution over the past two years. Aliev and
    his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian raised fresh hopes for a
    Karabakh breakthrough following their latest face-to-face talks held
    in Minsk on November 28.

    But Kocharian made it clear last week that he will not sign any
    agreements with Azerbaijan before next spring's Armenian parliamentary
    elections. Analysts doubt that a peace deal will be cut before
    presidential elections due in both Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2008.
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