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Armenian Unrest Threatens Peace In Nagarno-Karabakh - Feature

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  • Armenian Unrest Threatens Peace In Nagarno-Karabakh - Feature

    ARMENIAN UNREST THREATENS PEACE IN NAGARNO-KARABAKH - FEATURE

    Earthtimes
    March 6 2008
    UK

    Moscow/Yerevan - Border fighting between Armenia and Azeri troops
    in the disputed region of Nagarno-Karabakh turned to heavy artillery
    shelling this week in the worst clashes since a 1994 ceasefire that
    ended a six-year, full-scale war. Between 15 and 16 soldiers died
    and dozens were injured in Wednesday night clashes according to
    conflicting casualty claims by Armenian and Azeri officials.

    Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov on Thursday accused Armenia
    of initiating the battle to distract from violent post- election
    opposition protests at home that led the president to impose a 20-day
    emergency rule over the capital Yerevan.

    But Armenian President Robert Kocharian hit back Thursday: "The Azeris
    thought that the situation in Armenia had dulled the vigilance of
    our armed forces in Karabakh, that all our large military divisions
    had been relocated."

    The unresolved status of Nagarno-Karabakh, an Azeri province controlled
    by ethnic Armenian separatists, was the hottest topic in Armenia's
    February 19 elections and daily protests since then have led to
    clashes with police in which eight people died Sunday.

    The opposition's leader, Armenia's first post-Soviet president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, pledged to "correct" what he called "his biggest
    mistake": bringing into government top military officials from
    Nagorno-Karabakh such as incumbent Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian, whose presidential election win he now refuses to recognize.

    Ter-Petrosian accuses the Karabakh Clan, as his supporters have dubbed
    them, of widespread corruption and nepotism, including signing over
    control of crucial economic sectors to Russia, thereby transforming
    a long-time alliance into a "vassal-sovereign" relationship.

    Coming three weeks after Kosovo's declaration of independence from
    Serbia, Russia and the United States fear escalating tensions in the
    region and have called for restraint.

    The mountainous Caucasus region where Nagarno-Karabakh lies has
    emerged as strategically important as it lies along gas routes from
    the energy-rich Caspian Sea region to Europe.

    Western powers fear further instability could disrupt gas routes and
    further undermine a fragile security situation in the neighbourhood,
    which is host to a Russian military base and borders Iran.

    The United States and NATO declared Thursday that Kosovo's independence
    from Serbia could not serve as a precedence for Nagarno- Karabakh or
    any other region.

    Georgia's breakaway South Ossetia region on Wednesday asked for
    the European Union, the United Nations and Russia to recognize its
    independence, bearing out Russia's claim that Kosovo's independence
    would lead to a "parade of sovereignty" in the Caucasus.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev firmly rejects Kosovo's independence
    as illegal and has upped rhetoric about using any means to achieve
    unity ahead of October presidential elections.

    "We have been buying military machinery, airplanes and ammunition to
    be ready to liberate the occupied territories, and we are ready to
    do this," Russian newspaper Noviye Izvestia quoted Aliyev as saying
    on Thursday.

    "The conflict will come to an international solution when Armenia
    feels Azerbaijan's force," he said.

    Oil-rich Azerbaijan has increased its military spending to more than
    1 billion dollars in 2008, provoking a mini-arms race with Armenia,
    which in turn has hiked its military spending by 20 per cent in the
    past year.

    Thomas Gomart, head of the Russian/CIS programme at the Paris- based
    Institut Francais des Relations Internationales, voiced concern over
    the "evolution of the rhetoric" in a recent interview with Deutsche
    Presse-Agentur dpa.

    "The disproportion in the two countries' military spending is
    worrying. Azerbaijan's expenditure could be compared to the total
    Armenian budget," he said.

    bservers also fear that Armenia's post-election instability could
    aggravate relations with Turkey which has allied with fellow Muslim
    state Azerbaijan to blockade landlocked Armenia along its borders.

    Ter-Petrosian, who was forced from power by the current leadership in
    1998 for his proposal to compromise in peace talks with Azerbaijan,
    has argued the blockades are killing Armenia's possibilities for
    growth. "Russia cannot be Armenia's only road to the outside world,"
    he has said.

    But a construction boom and a healthy economy spoke in favour of
    the established leadership in the recent elections, and despite
    rallying thousand-strong opposition protests Ter-Petrosian remains
    widely unpopular among those who recall the economic hardships of
    the post-Soviet transition.

    Nagarno-Karabakh native and war hero Sarkisian is expected to keep
    up the hawkish stance set by his political mentor Kocharian during
    his decade at the helm, perpetuating fears of a new war along the
    border where gunfire breaks out regularly.
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