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Armenia, Azeri Leaders Meet On Karabakh In Moscow

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  • Armenia, Azeri Leaders Meet On Karabakh In Moscow

    ARMENIA, AZERI LEADERS MEET ON KARABAKH IN MOSCOW
    By Conor Sweeney

    Reuters
    July 17 2009

    MOSCOW, July 17 (Reuters) - The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    met in Moscow on Friday in a Moscow-brokered attempt to resolve one of
    the bitterest disputes left by the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

    Armenia's Serzh Sarksyan and Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev will also have
    a joint meeting with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Saturday,
    a Russian Foreign ministry source said, without giving further details.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly ethnic Armenian Christian enclave inside
    Azeri borders, declared independence in 1991 with support from Armenia
    and fought Muslim Azerbaijan in a war that killed some 35,000 people
    before a shaky ceasefire was signed in 1994.

    No country has recognised Karabakh's independence.

    The dispute led to Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey closing their borders
    with Armenia and remains one of the biggest threats to stability in
    the South Caucasus, a key route for oil and gas supplies from the
    Caspian region to Europe.

    Efforts by international mediators under the auspices of the
    Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, focused on
    finding a temporary solution to the problem including strong autonomy
    for Karabakh, have so far led nowhere.

    A series of bilateral meetings between Aliyev and Sarksyan has fuelled
    hopes that a compromise was near.

    Russia has strong leverage on both Azerbaijan and Armenia, and experts
    say mediation in Karabakh could consolidate Russia's strong role in
    the Southern Caucasus region.

    Medvedev, U.S. President Barack Obama and French President Nicolas
    Sarkozy urged Armenia and Azerbaijan last week to work for a compromise
    on lines set out by international mediators.

    The Kremlin's chief foreign policy aide, Sergei Prikhodko, said Russia
    would be ready to back any solution which suits both sides.

    Aliyev, in a speech in London on Monday, ruled out independence
    for Karabakh. "We are ready to grant the highest possible level of
    autonomy for those who live in Nagorno-Karabakh within the framework
    of a sovereign Azerbaijani state," he said.

    Karabakh says it insists on independence and Sarksyan will find it
    difficult to justify any compromise at home. (Reporting by Conor
    Sweeney and Oleg Shchedrov; editing by Tim Pearce)
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