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Mediators Confirm Disclosed Karabakh Plan

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  • Mediators Confirm Disclosed Karabakh Plan

    MEDIATORS CONFIRM DISCLOSED KARABAKH PLAN
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty. Czech Rep.
    June 28 2006

    The OSCE Minsk Group has officially confirmed and elaborated on
    the key principles of its proposed solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict that were controversially disclosed by its new U.S. co-chair
    late last week.

    In a joint statement that was circulated by the U.S. embassy in Yerevan
    on Wednesday, the mediating group's American, French and Russian
    co-chairs said their hitherto confidential peace plan envisages
    a self-determination referendum to be held in Karabakh after the
    liberation of Armenian-occupied territories in Azerbaijan.

    The statement was presented to the OSCE's decision-making Permanent
    Council in Vienna last Thursday and was not made public until being
    posted on the U.S. embassy website almost a week later. Washington's
    new top Karabakh negotiator, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
    Matthew Bryza, revealed details of the proposed peace plan to RFE/RL
    shortly after the Permanent Council meeting.

    Although those details had already been leaked to the media by Armenian
    officials last year, Yerevan reacted negatively to Bryza's interview,
    saying that the U.S. official failed to present other important
    provisions of the Minsk Group plan. The Armenian Foreign Ministry said
    on Monday that those include enabling Karabakh to retain an overland
    link with Armenia and remain under Armenian control at least until
    the referendum.

    Bryza's remarks also sparked allegations in the Armenian press that
    Washington is exerting pressure on Yerevan ahead of the Armenian
    parliamentary and presidential elections due in 2007 and 2008
    respectively. It is not clear if the U.S. State Department decided
    to publicize the Minsk Group statement through its mission in Armenia
    in order to end that speculation.

    "These principles include the phased redeployment of Armenian troops
    from Azerbaijani territories around Nagorno-Karabakh, with special
    modalities for Kelbajar and Lachin districts [separating Karabakh
    from Armenia proper]," said the co-chairs. "Demilitarization of those
    territories would follow. A referendum or population vote would be
    agreed, at an unspecified future date, to determine the final legal
    status of Nagorno-Karabakh."

    "An international peacekeeping force would be deployed," added
    the statement. "A joint commission would be agreed to implement the
    agreement. International financial assistance would be made available
    for demining, reconstruction, resettlement of internally displaced
    persons in the formerly occupied territories and the war-affected
    regions of Nagorno-Karabakh. The sides would renounce the use or
    threat of use of force, and international and bilateral security
    guarantees and assurances would be put in place."

    The mediators said the conflicting parties would also have to work
    out practical modalities of the Karabakh referendum. "Suitable
    preconditions for such a vote would have to be achieved so that
    the vote would take place in a non-coercive environment in which
    well-informed citizens have had ample opportunity to consider their
    positions after a vigorous debate in the public arena."

    This peace formula seems largely acceptable to Armenia. Its Foreign
    Ministry argued that the mediating powers have thereby recognized the
    Karabakh Armenians' right to self-determination. The ministry said
    in its statement that Presidents Ilham Aliev and Robert Kocharian
    have agreed to the proposed referendum but remain divided on other,
    unspecified issues.

    The Azerbaijani side initially responded positively to Bryza's
    disclosure of Minsk Group peace proposals. But in a statement on
    Tuesday, the Foreign Ministry in Baku chided the U.S. official for
    "taking them out of the general context of the proposed document." It
    also reiterated that Baku is only ready to grant Karabakh "the
    highest status of autonomy" and will never recognize its secession
    from Azerbaijan.

    The mediators, meanwhile, warned that failure by the two sides to
    cut a framework peace deal before the end of this year would close
    a rare "window of opportunity" to eliminate the principal source of
    instability in the South Caucasus.

    "We see no point right now in continuing intensive shuttle diplomacy
    we have engaged in over the past several months," they said. "We also
    see no point in initiating further presidential meetings until the
    sides demonstrate enough political will to overcome their remaining
    differences."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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