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Aliyev Says Armenia Should 'Liberate' First

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  • Aliyev Says Armenia Should 'Liberate' First

    ALIYEV SAYS ARMENIA SHOULD 'LIBERATE' FIRST

    Asbarez
    Jan 27th, 2010

    DAVOS, Switzerland-Azeri President Ilham Aliyev told the Wall Street
    Journal on Wednesday that he was confident that Turkey would not ratify
    the Armenia-Turkey protocols until Armenia "returned" the liberated
    territories around Karabakh and the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic itself
    to Azerbaijan's control.

    "There is a common understanding in the region that there should
    be a first step by Armenia to start the liberation of the occupied
    territories," Aliyev told the Wall Street Journal in an interview
    conducted in the margins of the World Economic Forum. He also told
    the Journal that he was "fully satisfied" with Turkey's understanding
    of the issue, despite his past harsh criticism.

    "If the two issues are disconnected, then probably Armenia will freeze
    negotiations with Azerbaijan (over Nagorno Karabakh)," Aliyev told the
    Journal, which reported that Aliyev, in the past, has threatened war.

    "Now we are approaching the moment when things get more and more
    difficult," President Serzh Sarkisian's deputy chief of staff Vigen
    Sargsyan told the Wall Street Journal.

    Sargsyan told the WSJ that while Armenia's government is sending
    the protocols to parliament for ratification, it is also preparing
    legislation to enable the president to withdraw his signature from
    treaties.

    "If this opportunity is lost it will push the whole region back,
    not to where we started when talks began but beyond that," Sargsyan
    told the WSJ.

    The WSJ reported that Aliyev has expressed anger over the
    Turkey-Armenia talks by threatening to reroute Azeri natural gas
    and oil exports away from Turkey. "Azerbaijan can export gas in four
    directions: Turkey, Georgia, Iran and Russia," Aliyev told the WSJ.

    The Azeri president also expressed his frustration over delays
    in the construction of the Nabucco pipeline. In an interview with
    Bloomberg TV Wednesday, Aliyev complained of a lack of leadership in
    the pipeline project. He told the Wall Street Journal that he would
    entertain selling as much gas to Russia's Gazprom if the pipeline
    were delayed. The concept of the Western-backed Nabucco pipeline is
    to side-step and diversify supplies away from Russia in an effort to
    diminish its energy influence in the region.

    "So far we do not know who is that leader who will move this process
    forward," Aliyev said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. "Who
    will engage itself in negotiations with gas producers, transiters? Who
    will do the marketing for this gas? What will be the pricing?

    "So a lot of questions that are not answered for quite a lot of time,"
    Aliyev told Bloomberg TV.
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