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Leaders To Meet On Karabakh, Pressure For Progress

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  • Leaders To Meet On Karabakh, Pressure For Progress

    LEADERS TO MEET ON KARABAKH, PRESSURE FOR PROGRESS

    Reuters
    Nov 19 2009
    UK

    TBILISI, Nov 19 (Reuters) - The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    will hold talks on Sunday on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, France
    said on Thursday, with Turkey pressing for progress before it seals
    a rapprochement with Armenia.

    Fifteen years of mediation have failed to produce a peace deal on the
    Armenian-populated mountain territory, at the heart of a key transit
    region for oil and gas to the West.

    But a historic thaw between Armenia and close Azeri ally Turkey --
    which has significance for Turkey's EU membership bid and landlocked
    Armenia's crisis-hit economy -- has thrust the conflict back into
    the diplomatic spotlight.

    Turkey says it wants to see progress on Nagorno-Karabakh before
    it ratifies a deal to open its border with Armenia and establish
    diplomatic ties, overcoming a century of hostility stemming from the
    mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    The French Foreign Ministry, in a statement posted on its website,
    said Armenia's Serzh Sarksyan and Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev would
    meet on Sunday at the French consulate in Munich.

    The negotiations are led by a trio of mediators from the United States,
    Russia and France working under the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

    Backed by Armenia, ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh threw off
    rule by Muslim Azerbaijan in fighting that erupted as the Soviet
    Union headed towards its 1991 collapse. Some 30,000 people died and
    more than 1 million were made homeless.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
    Azerbaijan. Ethnic Armenian forces took control of Nagorno-Karabakh and
    seven surrounding Azeri districts, including a corridor to Armenia. A
    ceasefire was agreed in 1994.

    The Munich meeting will be the sixth this year, an intensity fuelling
    speculation about a possible breakthrough. Mediators say they are
    making progress, but diplomats caution that neither side appears
    ready to commit to difficult concessions and sell them to their people.

    "Azerbaijan is standing at the middle of the bridge, and waiting for
    the other side to approach," Azeri Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov
    said on Thursday.

    Sarksyan is already under fire from nationalists at home over the thaw
    with longtime foe Turkey, making a deal on Nagorno-Karabakh even more
    unpalatable, analysts say.

    Mediators are working on a deal that would see the return of many
    of the Azeri districts held by Armenians, in return for greater
    international legitimacy for the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities and a
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