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  • BAKU: Baku suggests European, US peacekeepers in conflict zone

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    Aug 18 2009

    Baku suggests European, US peacekeepers in conflict zone

    18-08-2009 23:55:24


    A senior Azerbaijani official has said certain differences remain in
    the principles on settling the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict
    supported by Azerbaijan and Armenia.
    Novruz Mammadov, the head of the Presidential Administration
    international relations department, told local Turan news agency that
    Baku`s position remains unchanged: Armenia must withdraw its armed
    forces from the occupied Azerbaijani territories around Upper Garabagh
    stage by stage and Azerbaijani refugees displaced by the armed
    conflict in the early 1990s are to return home. This must be followed
    by the liberation of the strategic Lachin and Kalbajar districts,
    simultaneously with creating a corridor between Upper Garabagh and
    Armenia. These activities are to be accompanied by the demining of
    territories and rehabilitation work. All this may take five to ten
    years.
    "Further, the return of IDPs to Upper Garabagh proper and the
    stationing of peacekeeping forces are to follow. After 60,000
    Azerbaijanis return there and the 1991 situation is reinstated, a
    legal status of Upper Garabagh may be developed. All this may take up
    to ten years," Mammadov said, reiterating that the status
    determination must be in line within Azerbaijan`s territorial
    integrity.
    The presidential administration official noted that it was impossible
    to cite specific timeframes at this point, as it is currently
    uncertain how the developments will unfold.
    760,000 IDPs are expected to return to their homes in the seven
    Azerbaijani districts around Upper Garabagh that are currently under
    Armenian occupation.
    "All the houses, production, industrial and social infrastructure
    there is destroyed. The entire rehabilitation cannot be done
    overnight. Mine clearance alone may take several years. This being
    said, the whole settlement process may drag on for 15 to 20 years,"
    Mammadov said.
    Mammadov did not delve into details of the updated Madrid principles,
    a proposed peace outline brought forward in November 2007, but noted
    that they pertain to developing the Garabagh`s status, i.e. when and
    who will determine it, and how this decision will be made.
    "There are issues concerning peacekeeping forces, their composition
    and the time of their stationing, and there are certain issues
    concerning the corridor [linking Upper Garabagh and Armenia].
    The conflict between the two South Caucasus republics reared up in the
    late 1980s due to Armenia`s territorial claims. Upper Garabagh has
    been occupied by Armenia since a 1994 cease-fire ended hostilities
    that killed an estimated 30,000 people and ousted about a million
    Azerbaijanis out of their homes. Years of peace talks, brokered by US,
    Russian and French mediators through the Minsk Group (MG), have
    brought little tangible result.
    Mammadov agrees with the MG co-chairs that Baku and Yerevan are close
    to reaching agreement, but added that, at times, "a little detail
    affects the entire settlement process."
    "Certainly, Armenia wants the legal status of Upper Garabagh to be
    developed during the initial stage. But the general consent and the
    consent among the co-chairs is for all the seven districts around
    Upper Garabagh to be freed first."
    Mammadov emphasized that, according to Azerbaijan`s stance,
    peacekeeping forces should not include servicemen from neighboring
    states. "In our view, it would be good for the peacekeeping mission to
    be comprised of the armed forces of European countries and the United
    States."
    As for the location of peacekeepers, it would be appropriate to
    station them on the contact line between Upper Garabagh and the
    adjacent districts.
    Regarding ways of determining the region`s status, Mammadov stressed
    that it should comply with Azerbaijan`s Constitution.
    "The status issue will be resolved during the last stage [of the
    conflict resolution], and discussions over this continue. So, we can`t
    say anything specific to that end now," he said.
    If the peace process proceeds successfully, railway links will open up
    first. Along with that, local communications may be restored. Further,
    the issue of opening roads may arise. Then, an air link may be
    opened. "I believe that Armenia is primarily interested in opening the
    railway, as it feels like being in a blockade, which it dragged itself
    into," Mammadov added.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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