Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

US Co-Chair Of OSCE MG Urges Azerbaijan To Be Patient

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • US Co-Chair Of OSCE MG Urges Azerbaijan To Be Patient

    US CO-CHAIR OF OSCE MG URGES AZERBAIJAN TO BE PATIENT

    ARMINFO News Agency
    October 4, 2006 Wednesday

    During a meeting with Azeri Defense Minister Safar Abiyev the US
    co-chair of the OSCE MG Matthew Bryza urged Azerbaijan to be patient.

    AzerTag reports Bryza to say that Azerbaijan surpasses in Armenia in
    all spheres and to urge the country to wait a little bit more. Bryza
    said that, besides being the OSCE MG co-chair, he is also responsible
    for the resolution of other conflicts in the region, for energy
    security in Europe and the development of friendly relations between
    the US and Azerbaijan. He said that Azerbaijan is important for
    the US and Washington highly appreciates the country's political
    and economic achievements. Bryza thanked the Azeri authorities for
    active support in the US' anti-terror activities. He said that the
    international community wants the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to be
    resolved through peace talks.

    In his turn, Abiyev said that the talks are ineffective and that
    the OSCE MG's activities have not given positive results yet. He
    said that the key obstacle to the further development of Azeri-US
    strategic relations is the unsettled state of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict. Abiyev pointed out that "Armenia has occupied Azeri lands.

    Azerbaijan will not yield a single inch of its land. The conflict
    must be resolved in line with the international law and territorial
    integrity principle. If the peace talks give no result, Azerbaijan
    will restore its territorial integrity on its own."

    AzerTag does not specify if Bryza called for patience in response
    to this phrase but gives the phrases exactly in this sequence, which
    suggests a certain conclusion.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X