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Mediators Report More Progress Towards Karabakh Peace

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  • Mediators Report More Progress Towards Karabakh Peace

    MEDIATORS REPORT MORE PROGRESS TOWARDS KARABAKH PEACE
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Jan 17 2008

    International mediators claimed on Thursday to have made further
    progress towards the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict but
    indicated that no Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accords will be signed
    before Armenia's forthcoming presidential election.

    The American, French and Russian diplomats co-chairing the OSCE
    Minsk Group held a joint news conference in Yerevan after several
    days of fresh negotiations with the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia
    and Karabakh. They are due to complete their latest round of shuttle
    diplomacy on Friday with a follow-up meeting in Baku with Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliev.

    "I think we agree that we sense both [the Armenian and Azerbaijani]
    presidents are moving in the same direction and have a common vision of
    what an agreement on the basic principles will look like," said Matthew
    Bryza, Minsk Group's U.S. co-chair. "And I think both presidents
    realize that their counterpart is trying and is moving forward."

    Bryza had said last October that the mediating troika hopes Aliev
    and his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian will reach a verbal
    "gentlemen's agreement" on the basic principles of a Karabakh
    settlement before the Armenian election scheduled for February 19.

    But the U.S. diplomat argued on Thursday that there is no need to set
    "artificial deadlines" for such an agreement now because Aliev and
    Kocharian have proved their commitment to mutual compromise and need
    more time to clarify "every sentence, every word, every letter" in
    the framework peace deal formally proposed to them last November. "We
    sense that they are trying to finish the process as soon as possible,"
    he said.

    Bernard Fassier, France's chief Karabakh negotiator, implied that
    such a deal is unlikely to be formalized even before the presidential
    election due in Azerbaijan this fall. "If the parties' final answer on
    the whole [Minsk Group] package comes before the Armenian presidential
    elections, that will be wonderful," he said. "If it comes during the
    Armenian and Azerbaijani elections, that will also be wonderful. If
    that happens after the Azerbaijani presidential elections, that will
    be wonderful too."

    The authorities in Baku and Yerevan are understood to have already
    agreed in principle on the main points of the Minsk Group's current
    peace proposals. Those call for a phased resolution of the Karabakh
    conflict that would start with the liberation of Armenian-occupied
    Azerbaijani districts surrounding the disputed territory and the
    restoration of economic links between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Karabakh would remain under Armenian control at least until a
    referendum of self-determination that would determine the territory's
    final status, the main bone of contention.

    Karabakh Armenian leaders, notably the disputed region's former
    President Arkady Ghukasian, have expressed serious misgivings about the
    proposed peace formula before. Ghukasian's successor Bako Sahakian,
    who received the mediators in Stepanakert on Wednesday, has not yet
    publicly commented on it.

    The mediators gave no details of their talks in the Karabakh capital,
    with Fassier saying only that they were pleased to "sensible and
    pragmatic" statements from Karabakh leaders.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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