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  • Armenia and Azerbaijan hold talks

    The National, UAE
    Nov 23 2009


    Armenia and Azerbaijan hold talks

    Carl Schreck, Foreign Correspondent

    Last Updated: November 23. 2009 12:37AM UAE / November 22. 2009 8:37PM
    GMT MOSCOW // The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan met yesterday
    for talks over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territory, one day after
    the Azerbaijani president, Ilham Aliyev, threatened military action
    against the Armenian-controlled region should negotiations fall
    through.

    Mr Aliyev and his Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan, met at the
    French consul general's residence in Munich, Germany, to discuss the
    mountainous territory, which has been the focus of a frozen 15-year
    conflict between the two ex-Soviet republics. They agreed to a
    ceasefire in 1994 after a six-year war that left 30,000 people dead.

    Before the meeting, Mr Aliyev said a failure to reach any resolution
    on Karabakh's status could force his country to respond militarily.
    `If that meeting ends without result, then our hopes in negotiations
    will be exhausted and then we are left with no other option. We have
    the right to liberate our land by military means.'

    Analysts were not expecting the meeting to produce major results. A
    statement by the Azerbaijan state news agency AzerTac yesterday said
    only that the two leaders had met and discussed `the current state and
    prospects of the talks to solve' the Karabakh conflict.

    The negotiations come at a time of significant changes in the region.
    Turkey and Armenia have agreed to resume diplomatic relations and open
    their borders, which have been closed since 1993, when Ankara sided
    with Azerbaijan, whose Azeri majority is ethnically Turkic, on
    Karabakh.

    The normalisation of ties between Armenia and Turkey has increased the
    stakes for the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, to resolve the Karabakh
    issue, as Azerbaijan understands it is losing leverage in the conflict
    as relations warm between Ankara and Yerevan, the Armenian capital,
    said Svante Cornell, the research director of the Central
    Asia-Caucasus Institute and Silk Road Studies Program at Johns Hopkins
    University in the United States.

    http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/a rticle?AID=/20091123/FOREIGN/711229868/1013
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