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BAKU: No Karabakh Progress At OSCE Summit

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  • BAKU: No Karabakh Progress At OSCE Summit

    NO KARABAKH PROGRESS AT OSCE SUMMIT

    news.az
    Dec 1 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has harshly criticized Armenian
    policy on Karabakh in his address to the OSCE summit in Astana.

    Azerbaijan has the impression that Armenia wants to maintain the
    status quo on Karabakh, he told the summit's plenary session.

    "Instead of conducting talks in an atmosphere of good will and in
    the interest of finding a resolution of the conflict in the near
    future, Armenia prefers to follow a path of escalating the conflict
    with unpredictable consequences," President Aliyev said, according
    to Interfax-Azerbaijan.

    Armenia "constantly breaks the ceasefire regime, conducts military
    exercises in the occupied territories, tries to change the historic
    names of occupied towns and villages, illegally resettles the
    civilian population in the occupied territory, all in an attempt to
    make the situation irreversible and the peace process pointless",
    the Azerbaijani leader continued in a hard-hitting speech.

    "Armenia's behaviour during negotiations gives us the impression
    that Armenia does not seek peace, does not seek the liberation of the
    occupied territories and most probably wants to maintain the status
    quo for a long time and to render the talks process pointless,"
    Aliyev said.

    The OSCE is the body mediating a settlement to the Karabakh conflict
    through its Minsk Group, co-chaired by France, Russia and the USA.

    "The OSCE Minsk Group was created in 1992. Talks have been held within
    its framework for nearly 20 years but without result," Ilham Aliyev
    told the summit.

    "We are ready to continue talks and come to completion in the shortest
    possible time and also to reach a result that will be based on the
    norms and principles of international law as part of the territorial
    integrity of Azerbaijan," he said.

    The remarks pretty much put an end to hopes that the Azerbaijani
    and Armenian leaders might make progress at the summit on a Karabakh
    settlement.

    Diplomatic sources in Astana are reporting that the two presidents will
    not, after all, meet at the summit, according to ANS TV's correspondent
    in the Kazakh capital.

    The three Minsk Group co-chairs and Russian President Dmitriy Medvedev
    in particular held many rounds of talks with the sides in the run-up
    to the summit.

    The outlook was already not good earlier in the day on Wednesday. The
    heads of delegation of the three OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries
    and the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents said in a statement that
    they had agreed "that the time has come for more decisive efforts to
    resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict", not quite the breakthrough
    that some had been hoping for.

    The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
    when Armenia made territorial claims on the Azerbaijani territory
    of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian armed forces occupied a swathe of
    Azerbaijani territory from 1992, including the Nagorno-Karabakh
    region and seven surrounding districts. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
    a ceasefire agreement in 1994 but no long-term peace agreement has
    been reached.

    The nub of the conflict remains unresolved - the competing claims of
    territorial integrity, which Azerbaijan insists takes precedence in
    the case of Karabakh, and self-determination, which Armenia wants to
    see for the Armenians of Karabakh.




    From: A. Papazian
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