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ANKARA: Dashnak Official Warns Of War If Azeri, Armenia Talks Fail

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  • ANKARA: Dashnak Official Warns Of War If Azeri, Armenia Talks Fail

    DASHNAK OFFICIAL WARNS OF WAR IF AZERI, ARMENIA TALKS FAIL

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Tuesday, January 26, 2010

    Dashnak official warns of war if Azeri, Armenia talks fail

    A deadlock in peace talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan might lead
    to new conflicts in the region, warned a senior official from the
    far-right Armenian Revolutionary Federation, or Dashnaktsutyun Party.

    While praising the international negotiators for their active role in
    talks, Giro Manoian said that neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan now desire
    to engage a new war. His warning came a day after the presidents of
    Azerbaijan and Armenia held their fifth meeting for a peace agreement
    in the Russian resort city of Sochi, as Moscow pushes the sides to
    resolve their longstanding conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is an enclave in Azerbaijan that has been occupied
    by Armenian forces since the end of a six-year conflict that left
    about 30,000 people dead and 1 million displaced before a truce
    was reached in 1994. The region's unilateral independence is not
    recognized by the international community. The presidents of Armenia
    and Azerbaijan have been negotiating on the issue under the OSCE,
    but little progress has been made in the talks.

    When reminded of the positive picture drawn on the solution to the
    Karabakh problem in previous months, Manoian said he believed that
    was done to mislead the public. He also said that Turkey perceived
    the Karabakh problem differently than Russia, the United States
    and other Western nations. "When a solution to the Karabakh problem
    is mentioned, Turkey perceives it as returning the whole Karabakh
    to Azerbaijan. However, Russia and the United States are aware of
    the sensitivity of the problem," he told the Hurriyet Daily News &
    Economic Review in an e-mail interview.

    Armenia's Constitutional Court recently published a decision affirming
    the constitutionality of the protocol, angering Ankara because the
    decision stipulated that the agreements must not violate a part of
    Armenia's declaration of independence that calls for recognition of
    the deaths of Armenians in 1915 as "genocide."

    According to Manoian, Turkey has tried to use the court's ruling
    for its own good. "[Turkey] is not genuine on normalizing ties with
    Armenia. It is trying to build an image of a country that moves toward
    consensus. That is all."
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