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India Defends UN Vote On Azerbaijan-Armenia Dispute

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  • India Defends UN Vote On Azerbaijan-Armenia Dispute

    INDIA DEFENDS UN VOTE ON AZERBAIJAN-ARMENIA DISPUTE

    The Asian Age
    March 19 2008
    India

    New Delhi, 18 March: In a move reminiscent of its vote against Iran in
    the International Atomic Energy Agency, India has quietly overturned
    a decade-long policy of voting for, or abstaining from, any United
    Nations resolution on the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is an ethnic Armenian enclave located within the
    internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan. It has been the
    subject of a fierce territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    On 14 March, India joined Angola, Armenia, France, Russia, the
    United States and Vanuatu in voting against the UN General Assembly
    resolution in which Azerbaijan called for the immediate, complete and
    unconditional withdrawal of Armenian forces "from all the occupied
    territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan". Thirty-nine countries voted
    for the resolution, many of whom are members of the Organization of
    the Islamic Conference (OIC). One hundred countries abstained.

    The Azerbaijan government on Monday [17 March] summoned Mr M.M. Gayen
    from the Indian embassy in Baku and lodged a protest over what it
    called an "unfriendly" step. Azeri Deputy Foreign Minister Xalaf
    Xalafov told the Indian diplomat that the reasons that impelled India
    to vote against the resolution were unclear to his country. Mr Xalafov
    sought to suggest that a negative vote was all the more jarring because
    India has consistently defended international norms and principles of
    international law, including the principle of territorial integrity
    of nation-states.

    In New Delhi, Azeri ambassador Tamerlan Qarayev told this newspaper
    that India's vote was "unexpected" because previously India was either
    supporting or abstaining during voting in the UN.

    "This time we requested India to support us. We expected India to
    support the resolution or remain neutral," he said.

    "When our relations with India are developing positively, this step
    of India is unexpected and regrettable," Dr Qarayev said.

    "Doesn't India recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan? Or is
    India, with hundreds of ethnic minorities in its territory, intending
    to justify separatism? That is not clear to us," he wondered.

    The Ministry of External Affairs demurred, saying that India's vote
    was "consistent with the policies of the government of India".

    A scrutiny of India's voting pattern tells a different story. India
    voted for the resolutions or amendments to the resolution on four
    occasions in 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999. Since 2000, India abstained
    on at least four occasions, most recently in 2005.

    This is the first time India has voted against a resolution along
    with the Minsk Group countries - the US, Russia and France.

    Incidentally, even the United Kingdom and Japan, who are among the
    staunchest allies of the US, abstained, along with China, Germany
    and others.

    The Minsk Group was created in 1992 by the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe to encourage a peaceful, negotiated
    resolution to the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. France, Russia and the US are the co-chairs of this
    group. It has 10 other countries as members.

    This turbulence in Indo-Azeri ties comes ahead of likely visits to
    Baku by Union [Federal] Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs Vayalar
    Ravi and Minister of State for External Affairs E. Ahamed. From the
    Azeri side, the Speaker of the Azeri parliament and the ministers of
    foreign affairs, economic development and information technology are
    likely to visit India.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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