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  • S.Petersburg Meeting Of Armenian, Azerbaijani Presidents Could Not H

    S.PETERSBURG MEETING OF ARMENIAN, AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENTS COULD NOT HAVE CHANGED ANYTHING: EXPERT

    ARKA
    June 11

    YEREVAN, June 11. /ARKA/. The meeting of Armenian and Azerbaijani
    presidents in Saint Petersburg could not have changed anything,
    since there were no pre-requisites to a change, political analyst
    Alexander Iskandaryan, Director of the Caucasus Media Institute,
    stated at a Yerevan-Baku-Moscow space bridge.

    The two presidents met on June 6 in Saint Petersburg, which was their
    first meeting as presidents. The main achievement of the meeting is
    considered to be the decision to continue the talks within the OSCE
    Minsk Group based on the Madrid principles.

    Iskandaryan said that the reasons for the Karabakh confrontation
    do not lie in Saint Petersburg, Brussels, Paris or Washington. The
    expert said no regional developments are strong enough to change the
    format of relations between the conflicting sides.

    According to Iskandaryan, the balance of forces in the region rules
    out any attempts for compromise.

    "I do not only mean the military balance, but also the geographic
    location, historical balance of the recent ten years, the balance of
    various outside forces, such as lobbies in face of the Diaspora for
    Armenia and Turkey for Azerbaijan," he said.

    Iskandaryan said if not for he international community, Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Karabakh would find themselves in a can and there
    would be no negotiations.

    "The sides are trying to continue the war, or the fight or the conflict
    using other means, from lobbying to economic blockades. Negotiations
    are part or a subsystem of this conflict.

    Armenians do not agree with the compromises they should suggest if
    they want Azerbaijan to accept them, and Azerbaijan does not want to
    do compromises acceptable for Armenia," the expert said.

    Autonomy is the most Azerbaijan suggests today, which would mean
    getting back to what we had twenty years ago. Armenia is trying to
    fix a status quo.

    "Hence, the negotiation process turns to either a competition and
    exchange of accusations or an imitation. They exert pressure on us,
    and we - Armenians and Azerbaijanis, resist the process from within
    the region," Iskandaryan said.

    The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict started in 1988 when Nagorno-Karabakh
    with dominantly Armenian population declared its withdrawal from
    Azerbaijan. On December 10, 1991, the Karabakhi people voted for full
    independence from Azerbaijan in a referendum attended by a number of
    international observers.

    Large-scale military operations followed in which Azerbaijan lost
    control over Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent regions.

    On May 12, 1994, a ceasefire agreement was signed putting an end to
    the military operations in which 25,000-30,000 people were killed
    and about one million people were forced to leave their homes.

    Since 1992, peaceful settlement talks have been held under the auspices
    of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chaired by the USA, Russia and France.
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