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Karabakh Prize: Armenian Opposition Warns The President

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  • Karabakh Prize: Armenian Opposition Warns The President

    KARABAKH PRIZE: Armenian opposition warns the president
    by Gajane Movsesjan

    WPS Agency
    July 16, 2009 Thursday
    Russia

    ARMENIA EXPECTS NO RESULTS FROM THE MEETING BETWEEN ARMENIAN AND
    AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENTS; Nothing worthwhile is expected from the
    forthcoming meeting between the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    in Moscow.

    Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan Serj Sargsjan and Ilham
    Aliyev will meet in Moscow this week-end to discuss the problem of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian experts Vremya Novostei approached for
    comments said that they did not expect any breakthrough from the talks
    and that some meager progress was all that might be expected. Neither
    does Moscow expect any dramatic amelioration of the situation, for
    that matter. "Well, no signing of documents is planned. Rapprochement
    is the principal objective," Presidential Aide Sergei Prikhodko
    said. According to Prikhodko, the visitors will meet with each other
    and with President Dmitry Medvedev on July 18, presumably on the
    Kremlin's premises. Like some other CIS leaders, Sargsjan and Aliyev
    are going to Moscow to watch the Presidential Cup racing.

    Regular nature of the meetings between the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan is a factor that certainly instills hopes. Intermediaries
    have definitely contributed. As if in order to provide an additional
    impetus, the Americans revealed 6 out of 15 basic principles the
    foreign ministers of Russia, France, and the United States had
    formulated at the OSCE conference in Madrid in late 2007. What
    principles were thus revealed stood for a "transition period status"
    for Nagorno-Karabakh and a compromise between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    (through the return of the occupied lands to Baku, among other things).

    "International intermediaries are quite active, these days. As a matter
    of fact, the leaders of Russia, United States, and France even made a
    joint statement on Nagorno-Karabakh at the G8 summit in Italy. Besides,
    some of the principles were revealed... Not that they have been a
    secret from specialists, of course, but still... All of that creates
    a favorable backdrop for the talks about to take place. And yet,
    I do not expect any considerable progress in the foreseeable future
    all the same," said political scientist Sergei Minasjan, Assistant
    Director of the Institute of the Caucasus (Yerevan).

    The Armenian opposition disagreed with Minasjan. "The process of
    Nagorno-Karabakh settlement is pushed toward its end and not in the
    Armenians' favor at all. Sargsjan's subordinates go for unprecedented
    concessions which is but treason against the state," the Armenian
    National Congress announced in its recent statement.

    Replacement of the Russian ambassador in Yerevan in the meantime is the
    talk of the day within the Armenian political establishment. Ambassador
    Nikolai Pavlov returns to Moscow to make room for another diplomat,
    Vyacheslav Kovalenko who represented the Russian Federation in Tbilisi
    between July 2006 and 2008 when diplomatic relations between Russia
    and Georgia were severed.

    Minasjan denied existence of a connection between Kovalenko's arrival
    and the forthcoming talks over Nagorno-Karabakh. "Its relations with
    Georgia severed, Russia views Armenia as a country that may become an
    intermediary. To some extent, at least. Sending Kovalenko to Yerevan,
    official Moscow thought in terms of Georgia rather than of Armenia,"
    he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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