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BAKU: Baku urges change in Yerevan's stance at presidents' meeting

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  • BAKU: Baku urges change in Yerevan's stance at presidents' meeting

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    Nov 20 2009


    Baku urges change in Yerevan's stance at presidents' meeting


    20-11-2009 06:34:30
    Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov has said Baku expects
    a change in Yerevan's non-constructive stance at the next round of
    talks on the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict between Presidents
    Ilham Aliyev and Serzh Sarkisian due in Germany in the coming days.
    Azimov told reporters on Thursday that, though Armenia says it is
    ready for a peaceful solution of the long-standing dispute, its
    position `shows its moving in the opposite direction.'
    `If Armenia gives preference to violating Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity and separating a part of its land after the co-chairs' [the
    OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs brokering the peace process] many-year-long
    efforts, so many meetings and steps taken toward progress that hopes
    are bound with, while ignoring again the principles and the options
    offered, then Armenia adheres to an opposite position. So, a change
    must occur in Armenia's stance.'
    According to Azimov, without this change any advances in the conflict
    settlement are ruled out.
    `Azerbaijan's position is crystal clear. We want the problem to be
    solved within territorial integrity. And this
    stance of Azerbaijan is entirely supported by the international
    community. It is based upon the norms and principles of international
    law.'
    Azimov noted that Azerbaijan `leaves room for compromise' in its
    position, adding that Baku `is standing in the middle of the bridge
    and awaiting the opposing side to come there.'
    `If the Armenian side is ready to discuss compromises within
    Azerbaijan's territorial integrity, we are ready for that too,' Azimov
    said.
    The deputy minister pointed out that Yerevan has made a point of
    returning the agreed issues to the negotiating table, but he did not
    elaborate which issues have been agreed upon so far. He emphasized,
    though, that, in any case, liberation of the Armenia-occupied
    territories of Azerbaijan is one of the components of the conflict
    resolution. `If occupation does not end, nothing will be possible.'
    Azimov reiterated that Upper Garabagh and seven other Azerbaijani
    districts under occupation are integral parts of Azerbaijan and this
    is not a subject of discussion.
    `Vacating the seven districts and returning Azerbaijanis [displaced
    during the armed conflict in the early 1990s] to Upper Garabagh has
    been a core in Azerbaijan's position of principle since the very
    beginning. Armenia has two choices: the conflict is not settled or,
    following Azerbaijanis' return to Upper Garabagh, the region's status
    is determined. There is no other choice.'
    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. Despite numerous rounds of OSCE-brokered
    negotiations, peace talks have been fruitless so far and refugees
    remain stranded. Baku says the occupied districts must be freed and
    Azerbaijani refugees returned home, and only after that could the
    status of Upper Garabagh be determined within the territorial
    integrity of Azerbaijan.*
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