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BAKU: Garabagh Mediators Anger Azeri Gov't

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  • BAKU: Garabagh Mediators Anger Azeri Gov't

    GARABAGH MEDIATORS ANGER AZERI GOV'T

    AzerNews Weekly
    Feb 25 2009
    Azerbaijan

    The Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry has responded to a recent statement of
    the OSCE mediators brokering a settlement to the Armenia-Azerbaijan
    Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict that voiced concern over the
    documents submitted by the Azerbaijani representative to the United
    Nations late in 2008.

    The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group said in a statement last week
    that, despite two reports circulated at the request of the Permanent
    Representative of Azerbaijan to the UN on December 24 and 29, there
    is no military solution to the Garabagh conflict.

    The documents submitted by Baku stressed the importance of honoring
    Azerbaijan`s territorial integrity and asserted the nation`s right
    to defend itself.

    Khazar Ibrahim, the spokesman for the Azerbaijani ministry, said
    that while distributing the mentioned papers, Baku was guided by
    the norms of international law and will continue to do so, recalling
    that the November 2, 2008 Moscow Declaration of the two countries`
    presidents affirmed these principles as a basis for resolving the
    long-standing dispute.

    Ibrahim emphasized that Azerbaijan has repeatedly pledged its support
    for a peaceful resolution of the Garabagh conflict.

    "As for a military solution, it is the Armenian side that has been
    persistently trying to solve the problem by military means. Azerbaijani
    territories have been occupied by the Armenian military, and
    the ceasefire is being violated on the contact line [of the two
    countries` troops] by the Armenian armed forces. It is the Armenian
    side that the co-chairs` statement should be directed at. They must
    be urged to aspire toward a peaceful resolution of the conflict and
    to unequivocally pull their forces out of Azerbaijani land."

    Armenia has praised the intermediaries` statement. Foreign Minister
    Eduard Nalbandian said that the co-chairs had put forth a clear-cut
    stance toward the two documents submitted to the UN by Azerbaijan.

    "I think the Minsk Group co-chairs mean to say that the actions by
    one of the negotiating parties are impeding the peace process by
    creating difficulties," he claimed, in an apparent swipe at Azerbaijan.

    Armenia has been occupying over 20% of Azerbaijan`s territory since
    the early 1990s. Years of peace talks have brought few tangible
    results. Azerbaijani officials have repeatedly warned against
    Yerevan`s policy of aggression, saying the country`s land will be
    freed at any cost.

    The joint statement of the co-chairs - Bernard Fassier of France,
    Yury Merzlyakov of Russia, and Matthew Bryza of the United States -
    underscored the not using force "as a core element of any just and
    lasting settlement of the conflict." They repeated that Presidents
    Ilham Aliyev and Serzh Sarkisian described their most recent meeting
    in Zurich on January 28 as useful and constructive, despite the two
    Azerbaijani reports circulated in the UN General Assembly one month
    earlier. The Minsk Group co-chairs indicated that they "would not
    allow the peace process to be subverted by legalistic or historical
    discussions, though they will remain sensitive to historical concerns
    expressed by the parties to the conflict."

    Azerbaijan has sought to put the Garabagh conflict on the UN General
    Assembly agenda several times, but the Minsk Group co-chairing
    countries have not yet agreed to this.

    The UN has already passed five resolutions on the unconditional
    pullout of the Armenian armed forces from the occupied Azerbaijani
    territories. Nonetheless, Yerevan is sticking to its policy of
    occupation and ignoring international law.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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