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US, Russian Karabakh Mediators To Be Replaced

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  • US, Russian Karabakh Mediators To Be Replaced

    US, RUSSIAN KARABAKH MEDIATORS TO BE REPLACED

    Asbarez
    Jul 22nd, 2009

    MOSCOW (Combined Sources)--The Russian and American co-chairs of
    the OSCE Minsk Group will be replaced in the coming months, Russian
    co-chair, Yuri Merzlyakov, said on Wednesday.

    Merzlyakov and his American counterpart Matthew Bryza will travel to
    the South Caucasus in September with French co-chair Bernard Fassier
    to prepare a new meeting between Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and
    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian, who met in Moscow late last week.

    That trip will be Bryza's last one to the region in his capacity the
    American co-chair of the Minsk Group, Merzlyakov said, adding that
    he too may also be replaced this year.

    "I hope that after seven years of service as Russian Co-Chair of the
    Minsk Group I'll be allowed to leave the post," Merzlyakov said.

    "I think it will take place this year."

    Merzlyakov was appointed to the Minsk Group in September 2003,
    replacing Ambassador Nikolai Gribkov.

    Bryza, who is the US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European
    and Eurasian Affairs, was appointed as America's chief negotiator
    for the Karabakh conflict in June 2006, replacing Steven Mann.

    Earlier in June, Foreign Policy Magazine reported that Bryza had
    been short-listed to become the Obama Administration's pick for the
    recently vacated ambassadorial post in Baku. That speculation was
    later echoed by Azeri media, which reported that the US diplomat had
    already been approved as the next ambassador to Azerbaijan.

    Bryza, however, denied those reports, saying he had been assigned
    with finding a solution to the Karbakh conflict as the US co-chair
    of the Minsk Group.

    "There is no information about my appointment as Ambassador," Bryza
    reiterated during a press conference in Moscow Friday ahead of the
    meeting between Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and Azeri President
    Ilham Aliyev.

    He added though that if there was to be such an appointment, he would
    be pleased to work in any South Caucasus country.

    The three co-chairs will meet in Krakow, Poland on July 25-26 to
    discuss the upcoming Aliyev-Sarkisian summit, Merzlyakov was quoted
    as saying by the Azeri Trend News Agency.

    The Russian diplomat said he hoped an October summit of heads of
    state from the Commonwealth of Independent States, being held in
    the Moldovan capital of Chisinau, would yield "some achievements" on
    Karabakh "which could not be gained at the presidents' Moscow meeting."
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