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UN Asked To Aid Firefighting Effort In Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • UN Asked To Aid Firefighting Effort In Nagorno-Karabakh

    Easy Bourse (Communiqués de presse), France
    Sept 8 2006


    UN Asked To Aid Firefighting Effort In Nagorno-Karabakh
    Friday September 8th, 2006 / 6h33


    UNITED NATIONS (AP)--The U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution
    calling for the U.N. to urgently assist in preventing environmental
    damage from fires in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Armenia disassociated itself from the resolution, which was approved
    Thursday without a vote, and expressed concern at its title, "the
    situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan."
    The mountainous territory in Azerbaijan has been controlled - along
    with some surrounding areas - by Karabakh and Armenian forces since
    1994. Nagorno-Karabakh has been governed by a shaky cease-fire that
    in 1994 ended a six-year separatist war.
    The resolution stressed "the necessity to urgently conduct an
    environmental operation to suppress the fires." It took note of the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's intention to
    organize a mission to the region to assess the short-term and
    long-term impact of the fires.
    Nagorno-Karabakh is inside Azerbaijan, but is populated mostly by
    ethnic Armenians, who have run it and seven contiguous districts
    since the 1994 truce. Sporadic border clashes regularly break out and
    the unresolved conflict has held up development in the strategic
    region.
    Azerbaijan's U.N. Ambassador Yashar Aliyev introduced the draft
    resolution, saying that in early June Azerbaijan registered massive
    fires in the eastern part of the territory occupied by Armenia, and
    by August the fire had damaged more than 600 square kilometers.
    After the vote, he thanked everyone who supported the resolution,
    expressing dismay that Armenia disassociated itself from the text
    which had been negotiated with its diplomats over 48 hours. As a
    minimum, he said, it was "honest and appropriate."
    Armenia's U.N. Ambassador, Armen Martirosyan, said that although he
    supported the content of the resolution, he had serious problems with
    its title and opposed bringing any Nagorno-Karabakh issue to the
    United Nations.
    U.S. deputy ambassador Alejandro Wolff, speaking on behalf of the
    OSCE group dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue - the U.S., France
    and Russia - said the three countries remain committed to promoting a
    peaceful, negotiated solution to the conflict between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan.
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