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Azerbaijan, Armenia Signal Willingness To Resume Talks Over Disputed

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  • Azerbaijan, Armenia Signal Willingness To Resume Talks Over Disputed

    AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA SIGNAL WILLINGNESS TO RESUME TALKS OVER DISPUTED ENCLAVE
    Aida Sultanova

    AP Worldstream
    Jun 14, 2006

    Azerbaijan and Armenia on Wednesday promised to continue talks over
    Nagorno-Karabakh despite two failed efforts this year by the Caucasus
    nations' presidents to resolve the disputed enclave's status.

    The two countries' foreign ministers, along with international
    mediators, met in Paris for four hours of talks on Tuesday, a week
    after Ilham Aliev of Azerbaijan and Robert Kocharian of Armenia met
    in Romania on the sidelines of a Black Sea summit.

    Top officials from both countries also traded blame about the repeated
    failures.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov said in televised comments that
    Tuesday's meeting was "as always, tense and intensive. ... In any
    case, the process will continue. The next step will be determined in
    the near future."

    A high-ranking official with Armenia's Foreign Ministry accused
    Azerbaijan of making what he said were unconstructive steps, but said
    the talks would continue. The official requested anonymity since he
    was not authorized to speak for the ministry.

    Russian and French mediators from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe's so-called Minsk group also attended Tuesday's
    meeting.

    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. Sporadic
    border clashes regularly break out.

    ____

    Associated Press Writer Avet Demourian contributed to this report
    from Yerevan, Armenia.
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