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BAKU: Yerevan Stepping Back From Moscow Commitments

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  • BAKU: Yerevan Stepping Back From Moscow Commitments

    YEREVAN STEPPING BACK FROM MOSCOW COMMITMENTS

    AzerNews Weekly
    Nov 19 2008
    Azerbaijan

    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian has said that Upper (Nagorno)
    Garabagh, an Azeri region under Armenian occupation, should be brought
    into talks on settling the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.

    Sarkisian added, during an interview with a local public TV channel,
    that any agreement to end a nearly two-decade-long dispute could be
    reached only between Azerbaijan and the leader of the self-proclaimed
    Upper Garabagh republic. He also said that a solution to the conflict
    hinges on the recognition of the separatist entity as an independent
    state.

    The Azerbaijani government, however, has rebuffed the statement,
    saying it blatantly contradicts the declaration recently signed by the
    Azerbaijani, Armenian and Russian presidents. The Foreign Ministry
    spokesman, Khazar Ibrahim, noted that the document confirms that
    Baku and Yerevan are the only sides in peace talks. Unlike Armenia,
    Azerbaijan honors the conditions laid out in all documents it has
    signed, including the Moscow declaration, he said.

    Ibrahim reiterated Baku`s stance, saying granting any status to
    Upper Garabagh was possible strictly within Azerbaijan`s territorial
    integrity.

    In an effort to quicken the peace process, Russian President Dmitry
    Medvedev offered to hold a meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders,
    with Russia`s participation, following talks with Armenian President
    Serzh Sarkisian in Yerevan on October 21. The Moscow-brokered
    trilateral talks took place on November 2 and concluded with the
    signing of the declaration. The paper urges further OSCE-mediated
    dialog between the sides and joint efforts in bolstering stability
    in the South Caucasus through a political settlement of the conflict
    based upon principles of international law.

    Analysts say tension and discord within Armenia are prompting President
    Sarkisian to make such statements. At a time when the world community,
    including the Azerbaijani public, has praised the Moscow declaration
    as a step forward in reaching a solution to the Garabagh problem, the
    attitude toward this document in Armenia is rather ambiguous. Many
    there believe it favors Azerbaijan and that Russia has "sacrificed"
    Armenia for the sake of its own interests. For this reason the Armenian
    leader, from time to time, brings up the Garabagh status issue in a
    bid to allay growing discontent at home. Sarkisian`s recent visit to
    Upper Garabagh, as well as his seeking to discuss peace talks with
    the leaders of the country`s political parties, apparently is a bid
    to ease rumblings within his country.
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