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Azeri Official Chides Armenia's Leadership

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  • Azeri Official Chides Armenia's Leadership

    AZERI OFFICIAL CHIDES ARMENIA'S LEADERSHIP

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08 /04/azeri-official-chides-armenia%e2%80%99s-leader ship/
    Aug 4, 2009

    BAKU-Azerbaijan's chief presidential foreign policy adviser claimed
    that Armenia's current leadership "often changes its position" and
    is "not yet daring to take serious steps" in the peace talks. He
    also said the mediating powers have stepped up their pressure on the
    Armenian side due to a number of factors, notably the Turkish-Armenian
    rapprochement.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev's chief foreign policy aide Novruz
    Mammadov, in an extensive interview with the APA news agency claimed
    that Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian "has no concrete logical
    position on the solution to the [Nagorno-Karabakh] conflict and
    relations with the neighbor country."

    Mammadov accused the Armenian president of changing his mind.

    "How can it be that the Turkish president visited Armenia, but he
    [Sarskian] says that he will not visit Turkey. It's like a game,"
    added Mammadov.

    In discussing the Karabakh conflict, Mammadov said the basic principles
    of resolving the conflict favored by international mediators preclude
    international recognition of Karabakh's independence.

    "As is pointed out in the 'Madrid principles' and as the president of
    Azerbaijan has repeatedly stated in his speeches, the conflict can
    be resolved only within the framework of the country's territorial
    integrity," Mammadov said. He said future agreements on Karabakh's
    status envisioned by the proposed settlement would amount to clarifying
    the extent of the Karabakh's autonomy within Azerbaijan.

    The claims sharply contrast with Armenian officials' interpretation
    of the basic principles which the U.S., French and Russian co-chairs
    of the OSCE Minsk Group formally proposed in Madrid in November
    2007. According to them, Karabakh's population would be able to
    vote for independence, reunification with Armenia or return under
    Azerbaijani in a future referendum to be held years after the
    liberation of the Armenian-occupied territories around Karabakh.

    The mediators themselves have refused to elaborate on the proposed vote
    in their public pronouncements, saying that its practical modalities
    have yet to be agreed upon. In a July 10 joint statement, the U.S.,
    Russian and French presidents said only that Karabakh's status will
    be determined "through a legally binding expression of will."

    The mediators are expected to present the conflicting parties with what
    they call an "updated version" of the Madrid principles soon. Whether
    or not they plan to make significant changes in the document, first
    discussed by Aliyev and Armenia's former President Robert Kocharian,
    remains to be seen.
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