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Last-Ditch Talks Try To Prevent Azerbaijan-Armenia Conflict

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  • Last-Ditch Talks Try To Prevent Azerbaijan-Armenia Conflict

    LAST-DITCH TALKS TRY TO PREVENT AZERBAIJAN-ARMENIA CONFLICT
    by Marcus Papadopoulos

    Tribune Magazine
    http://www.tribunemagazine.co.uk/2009/11/ 26/last-ditch-talks-try-to-prevent-azerbaijan-arme nia-conflict/
    Nov 27 2009
    UK

    Peace talks were held last week between the leaders of Azerbaijan
    and Armenia in the hope of preventing an outbreak of hostilities in
    one of Europe's frozen conflicts - that of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and his Armenian counterpart Sergh
    Sarkisian met in Munich to try and find a solution to the unresolved
    dispute over the region.

    The talks were billed as a last-ditch attempt to defuse tension in
    this part of the south Caucasus and maintain a Russian-mediated peace
    deal signed last year between Baku and Yerevan.

    However, even before the talks had commenced, alarms were raised as a
    result of President Aliyev's war-like talk. The Azeri leader warned:
    "If the meeting ends without result, then our hopes in negotiations
    will be exhausted and then we are left with no other option. We should
    be prepared for that. Work on building up our army over the last few
    years has been undertaken for a purpose."

    Yet despite Mr Aliyev's threat to take back Nagorno-Karabakh by force,
    mediators reported after the talks that "significant progress" had been
    made. French mediator Bernard Fassier of the Organisation for Security
    and Co-operation in Europe said: "Some important progress has been
    reached." However, he warned that "difficulties" had been "identified".

    Following the conclusion of the meeting, the Azeri and Armenian
    presidents left without talking to reporters.

    The mediators in these peace talks - Russia, the United States and
    the OSCE - are now planning another meeting. As yet, there are no
    details of when this might take place.

    Turkey, which has some influence in the south Caucasus and enjoys close
    relations with Azerbaijan, said that peace could never be achieved
    in the region until "Azerbaijan's occupied territories are liberated.".

    Demonstrating just how high emotions run over the issue of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, the day after the peace talks had ended, the
    spokesman for Armenian President Sarkisian said that, in the event
    of military force being used by Azerbaijan against the breakaway
    region, Armenia would recognise its independence. "Armenia cannot
    stay indifferent to the fate of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. We
    are responsible for the security of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh."

    The conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh began in the dying years of the
    Soviet Union following a declaration of independence from Azerbaijan
    by the Armenian majority in the region in 1988.

    Full-scale fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan ensued and only
    ended after a Russian brokered-peace agreement in 1994 .
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