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  • OSCE Brokers New Round Of NK Talks Between Armenia, Azerbaijan

    OSCE BROKERS NEW ROUND OF NK TALKS BETWEEN ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Oct 3 2006

    YEREVAN, Armenia Envoys from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe on Tuesday brokered a new round of talks between
    foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict following a tense impasse.

    Yuri Merzlyakov, a Russian diplomat who co-chairs the so-called Minsk
    group of the OSCE dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, said
    the two nations' foreign ministers were to meet Friday in Moscow. He
    said a time and venue for a meeting of presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan remain to be negotiated.

    The foreign ministers' meeting would restart bilateral talks which
    have been interrupted recently due to the lack of progress.

    "We would like to rejuvenate direct contacts between the sides,
    and I think we have achieved this goal," said U.S. Deputy Assistant
    Secretary of State Matthew J. Bryza, another co-chair.

    OSCE envoys held talks in Armenia Tuesday a day after visiting
    Azerbaijan.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a region in Azerbaijan that has been under the
    control of Armenian and ethnic-Armenian Karabakh forces since a 1994
    cease-fire ended a six-year separatist war that killed about 30,000
    people and drove about 1 million from their homes. The region's final
    status has not been worked out, and years of talks under the auspices
    of OSCE mediators have brought little visible result.

    Talks in France in February between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev
    and Armenian President Robert Kocharian about the enclave broke down,
    and the two leaders again failed to agree on principles for settling
    the conflict when they met again in Romania in June.

    "We aren't saying that we are on the verge of a grand breakthrough
    or that the difficult problems have got any easier, but we do sense
    the willingness of the sides to think in a deeper way and look for
    a way to move ahead," Bryza said.

    He said that lack of trust between the parties continued to hinder
    the talks and said that "an effort to rebuild that confidence" was
    particularly important.

    Earlier this year, OSCE mediators proposed a set of principles for
    settling the conflict which included withdrawing Armenian troops
    from the Azerbaijani territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh but
    suggested that a corridor linking Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh would
    remain under Armenian control.

    The principles also included deploying international peacekeepers,
    resettling displaced people and a referendum - its timing and format
    to be worked out later - on the final legal status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Merzlyakov said Azerbaijan and Armenia were advised to proceed from
    the same set of principles. "It's wrong to say that the things already
    done are no longer on the table," he said.

    YEREVAN, Armenia Envoys from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe on Tuesday brokered a new round of talks between
    foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict following a tense impasse.

    Yuri Merzlyakov, a Russian diplomat who co-chairs the so-called Minsk
    group of the OSCE dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, said
    the two nations' foreign ministers were to meet Friday in Moscow. He
    said a time and venue for a meeting of presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan remain to be negotiated.

    The foreign ministers' meeting would restart bilateral talks which
    have been interrupted recently due to the lack of progress.

    "We would like to rejuvenate direct contacts between the sides,
    and I think we have achieved this goal," said U.S. Deputy Assistant
    Secretary of State Matthew J. Bryza, another co-chair.

    OSCE envoys held talks in Armenia Tuesday a day after visiting
    Azerbaijan.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a region in Azerbaijan that has been under the
    control of Armenian and ethnic-Armenian Karabakh forces since a 1994
    cease-fire ended a six-year separatist war that killed about 30,000
    people and drove about 1 million from their homes. The region's final
    status has not been worked out, and years of talks under the auspices
    of OSCE mediators have brought little visible result.

    Talks in France in February between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev
    and Armenian President Robert Kocharian about the enclave broke down,
    and the two leaders again failed to agree on principles for settling
    the conflict when they met again in Romania in June.

    "We aren't saying that we are on the verge of a grand breakthrough
    or that the difficult problems have got any easier, but we do sense
    the willingness of the sides to think in a deeper way and look for
    a way to move ahead," Bryza said.

    He said that lack of trust between the parties continued to hinder
    the talks and said that "an effort to rebuild that confidence" was
    particularly important.

    Earlier this year, OSCE mediators proposed a set of principles for
    settling the conflict which included withdrawing Armenian troops
    from the Azerbaijani territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh but
    suggested that a corridor linking Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh would
    remain under Armenian control.

    The principles also included deploying international peacekeepers,
    resettling displaced people and a referendum - its timing and format
    to be worked out later - on the final legal status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Merzlyakov said Azerbaijan and Armenia were advised to proceed from
    the same set of principles. "It's wrong to say that the things already
    done are no longer on the table," he said.
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