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Estonian President Visits Oil Terminal, Historical Park In Azerbaija

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  • Estonian President Visits Oil Terminal, Historical Park In Azerbaija

    ESTONIAN PRESIDENT VISITS OIL TERMINAL, HISTORICAL PARK IN AZERBAIJAN

    Baltic News Service
    January 15, 2009 Thursday 3:07 PM EET

    Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves, now on an official visit to
    Azerbaijan, Wednesday visited the Sangachal oil refinery and the Gala
    historical and ethnographic reserve and discussed with the minister
    for industry and energy alternative energy supply opportunities to
    countries of the European Union.

    Ilves and members of the Estonian business delegation were given an
    overview of production and technology at a terminal of the Azerbaijani
    state oil company that went into operation in 2001, the Azertac news
    agency reported. Through that terminal oil arrives at end users
    via the Baku-Novorossiisk, Baku-Supsa and Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipelines and gas via the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline.

    On Wednesday the Estonian president also visited the Gala historical
    and ethnographic reserve in the vicinbity of the Azerbaijani capital
    of Baku. The park has unique historical and cultural monuments starting
    from the 3rd century BC.

    During Ilves's meeting with Natig Aliyev, the industry and energy
    minister of Azerbaijan, the energy capacity of the country in the
    future and the Nabucco pipeline project for the supply of gas to
    Europe was discussed.

    Commenting on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, President Toomas Hendrik
    Ilves Wednesday one more time underlined Estonia's respect of the
    principle of countries' territorial integrity. Ilves gave an interview
    to Azerbaijan's state television, answering to questions pertaining
    to cooperation between the two countries, neighbourhood policy of
    the European Union, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, energy security,
    the situation of the Azeri community in Estonia and other aspects of
    relations between the two countries.

    Speaking about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Ilves said that Estonia
    had always respected the principle of territorial integrity, pointing
    out that war had never solved any problems. Ilves added that the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue was not a problem for Azerbaijan alone but to
    many countries.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia waged a war over Nagorno-Karabakh from February
    1988 until May 1994. Because of the war Azerbaijan lost 9 percent of
    its territory and more than 800,000 fugitives were forced to return
    to Azerbaijan.

    After the war a mainly Armenian-populated Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh
    with its capital in Stepanakert was established and only the Republic
    of Armenia has recognized its independence.
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