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  • In Karabakh, suspicion of peace drive

    Agence France Presse, France
    July 17, 2009 Friday 3:13 PM GMT

    In Karabakh, suspicion of peace drive

    BY: Mariam Harutunian
    STEPANAKERT, Azerbaijan, July 17 2009


    On the streets of Nagorny Karabakh's chief town of Stepanakert, locals
    say the tense status quo is fine with them and eye big power efforts
    to resolve the dispute over their enclave only with suspicion.

    "The international community's pressure is enormous," said Arshavir
    Sarkisian, a 68-year-old veteran of the war with Azerbaijan.

    "But Serzh knows the price paid to escape from Azerbaijan's yoke," he
    added, referring to Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian. "I am sure he
    will not sign anything that could put our independence in jeopardy."

    The Armenian president and his counterpart from Azerbaijan, Ilham
    Aliyev, held a preliminary meeting Friday in Moscow ahead of a
    Russia-brokered meeting with President Dmitry Medvedev scheduled for
    Saturday.

    For young people in Nagorny Karabakh, like 21-year old student
    Varuzhan Akopian, the war in the late 1980s and early 1990s is only a
    very dim memory and they say they cannot imagine life being governed
    from Baku.

    "I remember very well our life in a basement, where we would hide
    during the bombings," Varuzhan said.

    "The international mediators do not understand that one cannot force
    us to accept a fate that foreigners want to impose on us.

    "How do they expect to explain to our generation that we must become
    citizens of the country that hates us?" he added.

    The three-way meeting between Sarkisian, Aliyev and Medvedev will be
    only the latest in a string of efforts over many years to bring an end
    to another "frozen conflict" that poisons relations between Baku and
    Yerevan today.

    "We hope to reach the finish line to resolve this conflict," said Yuri
    Merzliakov, the co-chair of the so-called Minsk Group comprising
    France, the United States and Russia that mediates the settlement
    process.

    Nagorny Karabakh declared independence from Azerbaijan in 1991 amid a
    conflict that killed as many as 30,000 people and forced two million
    to flee their homes.

    A ceasefire ended large-scale hostilities in 1994 but the dispute is
    far from resolved and sporadic shooting incidents continue between
    Armenian and Azerbaijani forces.

    Many in Karabakh cite Cyprus, the island divided between Turkish and
    Greek communities, as a precedent they believe supports their
    independence bid.

    "Who is saying today to Turks that they must return lands to Cypriots?
    Nobody," said Gevorg, a 22-year-old restaurant waiter.

    "Everybody will accept Karabakh's independence" in 15 years."

    Despite the violence of the conflict, Stepanakert today bears no
    traces of war.

    Renovation of buildings and construction of new roads, schools,
    hospitals and even elegant cafes continues despite the global economic
    crisis.

    Samvel Arutunian, a supermarket owner, recently returned to
    Stepanakert after spending 11 years in Moscow and plans to open more
    shops.

    "People are reaping the first fruits of their labour," he
    said. "Business is becoming profitable. Living standards and
    purchasing power are rising."

    mkh-neo-im/cb/mb
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