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Armenia And Azerbaijan: OSCE Wants Civil Society Groups To Help Kara

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  • Armenia And Azerbaijan: OSCE Wants Civil Society Groups To Help Kara

    ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN: OSCE WANTS CIVIL SOCIETY GROUPS TO HELP KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS
    Haroutiun Khachatrian

    Eurasianet
    www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/articles/ eav040209af.shtml
    April 2, 2009

    As the talks on Nagorno-Karabakh remain stalemated, diplomats
    moderating the negotiations recently called on 40 civil society
    representatives from Armenia, Azerbaijan and the disputed region to
    make a difference in the peace process.

    The Azerbaijani-Armenian Peace Forum, held in Vienna on March 24-27,
    is the latest in a series of such meetings sponsored by London-based
    International Alert, a non-governmental group that describes itself as
    "an international peace-building" organization. International Alert
    has been involved in the South Caucasus since 1996.

    To secure attendees' interest in trilateral discussions, the three
    co-chairs of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's
    Minsk Group, which moderates the Karabakh talks, shared details about
    the negotiations' status -- the co-chair's first such briefing with
    civil society representatives.

    "The status of Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be agreed on now, as both
    suggested solutions -- international recognition of Karabakh as
    an independent state, and its return back into Azerbaijan -- are
    now impossible," France's Ambassador Bernard Fassier elaborated
    on March 24. The so-called Madrid Principles, a framework for the
    negotiations, "are aimed at . . . First, return of the regions around
    Nagorno-Karabakh [to] the control of Azerbaijan; second: Reaching an
    agreement about a temporary status of Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Fassier's explanation came as a surprise for many of the Armenian
    civil society participants present; supporters of ex-president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian have speculated that President Serzh Sargsyan is close
    to an agreement with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on Karabakh's
    final status that would not be optimal for Armenia.

    The co-chairs noted that lingering mutual hostility in Armenia and
    Azerbaijan is burdening consensus-building efforts. "Our impression is
    that the two presidents, Sargsyan and Aliyev, are closer to reaching a
    consensus, than the populations in their [respective] countries are,"
    US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian
    Affairs Matthew Bryza, the American co-chairman, said. Bryza called
    for cooperation between civil society representatives and government
    officials in improving public support for compromise.

    Bryza also expressed optimism about recent developments in relations
    between Armenia and Turkey, a key Azerbaijani ally that closed its
    Armenian border in 1993 in response to the war with Azerbaijan
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. The American diplomat underlined that relations between
    Armenia and Turkey may normalize soon, which could help Yerevan and
    Baku reach a "breakthrough" in Karabakh.

    With an eye to Moscow's 2008 war with Georgia over breakaway South
    Ossetia, Yuri Merzliakov, the Russian co-chairman, also stressed the
    importance of mutual trust in the South Caucasus region. Merzliakov
    expressed regret that Azerbaijan had rejected the recent appeal of
    the co-chairs to remove snipers from the frontline.

    The three co-chairmen declined further elaboration about the
    negotiations. Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, personal representative of
    OSCE Chairman-in-Office, and Charalampos Christopoulos, special envoy
    of the OSCE Chairman-in-office for frozen conflicts, also attended
    the meeting.

    Participants in the forum discussed the possibility of holding
    mutual visits on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, as well as online
    discussions and lectures. Details on such initiatives remain in
    the works. A final document, adopted without the co-chairmen's
    participation, agreed with the Minsk Group that "civil society is
    insufficiently informed and is misinformed." It added that "language
    of enmity is used increasingly."

    Editor's Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based freelance
    writer who attended the Azerbaijani-Armenian Peace Forum in Vienna.
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