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BAKU: Moscow ready to act as `guarantor' of Garabagh settlement

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  • BAKU: Moscow ready to act as `guarantor' of Garabagh settlement

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    Nov 5 2009

    Moscow ready to act as `guarantor' of Garabagh settlement


    05-11-2009 05:16:59
    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigori Karasin has said Moscow is
    ready to back a solution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict that would
    suit all sides involved and act as a guarantor of a settlement if a
    compromise is reached.
    `A solution of the problem that will allow bringing back stability and
    tranquility in the trans-Caucasia region will be viable,' Karasin told
    Respublika Armenia newspaper.
    `Such a solution should help to maintain the historically-shaped
    geo-political balance of forces in the region in the post-conflict
    period, without simultaneously turning this region into a stage of
    international political and military rivalry,' said Karasin.
    The deputy minister reminded that Russia has been actively involved in
    brokering a settlement to the Garabagh conflict since peace talks
    began.
    `Currently, Russia is fulfilling these duties on a multilateral basis,
    acting, along with the U.S. and France, as a co-chair of the OSCE
    Minsk Group, the main international forum for seeking a political
    solution to the Garabagh settlement,' Karasin said, adding that
    Moscow's mediating efforts are also being made through bilateral
    discussions in Baku and Yerevan.
    He said that it is not by mere chance that Russian President Dmitry
    Medvedev, hosting his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sarkisian in Moscow
    on October 12, regarded Russia's involvement in the process of
    Garabagh settlement as `a very important dimension of our relations.'
    `We see our role in assisting the process of settling the Upper
    Garabagh conflict, the sides' seeking mutually acceptable upshots on
    key issues, but [doing so] without imposing any external recipes on
    the parties to the conflict,' Karasin said, adding that the brunt of
    responsibility for making a final choice rests with Azeris and
    Armenians proper.
    According to Karasin, the parties have achieved certain progress in
    agreeing upon the basic principles of the conflict settlement, and
    Moscow is ready to continue doing everything in its power to move this
    process forward.
    Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a lengthy war that ended with the
    signing of a cease-fire in 1994, but Armenia continues to occupy Upper
    Garabagh and seven other Azerbaijani districts in defiance of
    international law. Peace talks have not yet resulted in resolving the
    conflict.
    Touching upon Turkey-Armenia relations, the Russian deputy minister
    said no aspect of the recently-reached bilateral agreement could be
    interpreted as hurting the interests of a third party. He noted that
    Ankara and Yerevan's signing protocols on mending ties last month
    indicates the two countries' decisiveness to establish good
    neighborliness ties.
    Karasin added that Moscow was ready to support the Turkish-Armenian
    rapprochement by implementing economic projects in the future, in
    particular, those in the energy and transport sectors.
    Turkey, Azerbaijan's ally, and Armenia signed protocols to establish
    diplomatic relations and reopen their borders in Zurich on October 10,
    after decades of hostility. The move has raised concerns in
    Azerbaijan.*

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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