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Russian Leader Seeks New Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace Push

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  • Russian Leader Seeks New Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace Push

    RUSSIAN LEADER SEEKS NEW ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN PEACE PUSH
    by Marina Lapenkova

    Agence France Presse
    October 21, 2008 Tuesday 12:30 PM GMT

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday proposed a renewed role
    in mediation between Caucasus foes Armenia and Azerbaijan, amid a
    rising push by outside powers for influence in the region.

    Speaking in Yerevan on his first visit to the South Caucasus since
    Russia's recent military thrust into Georgia, Medvedev said he planned
    to host peace talks on the war-torn Nagorny-Karabakh region between
    the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    "I hope that in the near future a meeting between the three presidents
    will take place to find a solution to the problem" of the disputed
    territory, Medvedev said at a news conference with Armenian President
    Serzh Sarkisian in Armenia's capital. "I hope it will take place
    in Russia."

    Nagorny-Karabakh, a region inside Azerbaijan, was seized by Armenian
    separatists in a 1990s war that claimed tens of thousands of lives,
    one of several armed conflicts that broke out in the dying months of
    the Soviet Union.

    Medvedev's initiative comes as the United States and Turkey are
    seeking greater influence in Armenia, a nation that has relied on
    Russia as its protector.

    In a sign of shifting political currents, Armenia took an ambiguous
    stance on Russia's conflict with Georgia in August and refused to
    follow Moscow's lead in recognising the independence of the rebel
    Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    Sarkisian said Armenia was ready for talks with Azerbaijan on the
    basis of principles worked out at international negotiations in Madrid
    last year, meaning that the people of Nagorny-Karabakh gain the right
    to self-determination.

    Soldiers in the Karabakh conflict regularly exchange fire, claiming
    lives on both sides.

    "Armenia is ready to pursue (peace) negotiations on the basis of the
    Madrid principles," Sarkisian said.

    Medvedev's visit, in which he presided at the renaming of a central
    Yerevan square as Russia Square, came amid growing Western attention
    to the war-torn Caucasus in the wake of the August war with Georgia
    over the Russian-backed region of South Ossetia.

    While the Russian daily Izvestia pointed to Armenia's isolation and
    said Russia was its only real friend, other observers believe the
    conflict in Georgia, which disrupted gas supplies in the region,
    may spur Armenia into new alliances.

    Russia currently has a military base in Armenia and runs the country's
    chief energy source, a nuclear power station.

    The country is not only cut off from Azerbaijan but also has no
    diplomatic ties with western neighbour Turkey, reflecting a bitter row
    over Armenian claims that Ottoman-era killings of Armenians amounted
    to genocide.

    But in the wake of the August war in Georgia, Turkey, historically
    a counter-weight to Russia, proposed a new format for discussions:
    a "Platform for Cooperation and Stability in the Caucasus."

    And last month saw an historic first visit to Armenia by Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul.
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