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People Living In Nagorno-Karabakh Should Determine Their Status Thro

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  • People Living In Nagorno-Karabakh Should Determine Their Status Thro

    PEOPLE LIVING IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH SHOULD DETERMINE THEIR STATUS THROUGH VOTING - U.S. DIPLOMAT

    Interfax News Agency
    Aug 1 2008
    Russia

    MOSCOW. Aug 1 (Interfax) - The people living in Nagorno-Karabakh will
    decide themselves whether the republic should remain under Azerbaijan's
    jurisdiction or gain independence, said U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary
    of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Matthew Bryza, a co-chair
    of the OSCE Minsk Group.

    "That's what the vote would determine [] by the people who are there,
    I mean by the Karabakhs themselves," Bryza told journalists in Moscow
    following a meeting between the Armenian and Azeri foreign ministers
    on Thursday.

    "It's the basic principles that have been talked about before, I mean
    the rough framework," Bryza said.

    "None of this by the way is agreed, nothing is agreed until everything
    is agreed," Bryza said. "What we have suggested - only what we have
    suggested - is that the Armenian troops would pull out of the seven
    territories around Karabakh, there would be international peacekeepers
    that are brought in there, then there would be the return of internally
    displaced persons and refugees, that there would be a corridor that
    connects Armenia and Nagorno- Karabakh, and there would be a process
    of voting, be it a plebiscite or a referendum, you can talk about
    different words, but anyway, a voting process to determine the future
    of Nagorno-Karabakh, its future status," he said.

    "We don't know exactly when that would occur, all those sorts of
    modalities would need to be negotiated," he added.

    What is also important is that the parties trust each other and have
    enough political will, Bryza said. He also warned against the danger
    of a stall in the negotiations.

    Yury Merzlyakov, the Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, praised
    the group's active role in settling the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    "The way the process is going on, including meetings between the
    presidents and the foreign ministers, means that the Minsk Group
    is acting properly and that the conflicting parties - Armenia
    and Azerbaijan - have constructive attitudes toward each other,"
    Merzlyakov told journalists.

    Baku lost control over Nagorno-Karabakh and several districts adjacent
    to it in a bloody conflict between Azeris and Armenians in the
    1990s. The conflict rendered about 1 million Azeris refugees. The UN
    Security Council condemned the occupation of Azerbaijan's territories
    by Armenia and demanded that Armenian troops be withdrawn from them.

    A negotiating process to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh problem is
    currently underway with international mediation of the OSCE Minsk
    Group, which is comprised of representatives from the U.S., Russia,
    and France.
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