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Armenia, Azerbaijan Announce No Progress In Karabakh Talks In Romani

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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan Announce No Progress In Karabakh Talks In Romani

    ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN ANNOUNCE NO PROGRESS IN KARABAKH TALKS IN ROMANIA

    AP Worldstream
    Jun 06, 2006

    The foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia said Tuesday that
    talks between their countries' leaders had made no progress toward
    a settlement of the dispute over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, but
    that they had instructions to continue negotiations.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian and Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliev discussed the long-standing conflict on the sidelines of a
    Black Sea summit in Bucharest, Romania, on Sunday and Monday.

    Representatives of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe, which is trying to broker a resolution of the 18-year-old
    conflict, were also present.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian told state television that
    the talks had been conducted "in a normal atmosphere, but they did
    not succeed in registering progress and giving a positive impulse to
    solving the problem of the Karabakh conflict."

    Still, he said that he and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov had orders to try to find points on which they could
    bring the two countries' positions closer.

    Mammadyarov said that, in spite of the lack of a breakthrough, the
    Aliev-Kocharian meeting had seen a "wide discussion" of the details
    of a settlement.

    "We decided to continue the process and, if necessary, to hold another
    meeting at the level of foreign ministers," Mammadyarov said.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is inside Azerbaijan but populated mostly by ethnic
    Armenians, who have run it and seven contiguous districts since an
    uneasy 1994 cease-fire ended six years of full-scale war. There are
    sporadic border clashes.
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