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Twenty-One Years Later: What Happened To "Self-Determination"?

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  • Twenty-One Years Later: What Happened To "Self-Determination"?

    TWENTY-ONE YEARS LATER: WHAT HAPPENED TO "SELF-DETERMINATION"?
    By Aris Ghazinyan

    ArmeniaNow reporter
    Map: www.armenianow.com
    20.07.10 | 16:15

    Analysis

    Twenty-one years ago this week the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US
    Senate passed a Resolution on "US assistance to the peaceful settlement
    of the Nagorno Karabakh issue in accordance with the people's will
    of Soviet Armenia".

    The document was calling on Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev to
    "discuss the demand for reunification with Armenia with representatives
    of Nagorno Karabakh as well as representatives of the democratic
    movement (including members of Karabakh Committee recently released
    from confinement)".

    Hence, 21 years ago the US Congress's Upper Chamber Commission allowed
    for a possibility of reunification of two Armenian entities.

    The resolution also appealed to American diplomats to achieve
    "investigation by the highest instances of cases of violence
    against Armenians" in the bilateral negotiations with the Soviet
    administration.

    Obviously, such a resolution could not help but encourage Armenians
    who were in a blockade. "We are not alone," proclaimed the leaders
    of the movement.

    Nations' right to self-determination received international recognition
    in the process of collapse of the colonial system and was consolidated
    in the December 14, 1960, "Declaration on granting independence to
    colonial countries and peoples".

    The adopted declaration accelerated the liquidation of colonial
    regimes and about 100 new states emerged on the ruins of empires.

    The Soviet Union was perceived as one such empire.

    Besides the declaration, American law-makers were guided also by
    other international legal acts.

    The "International pact on civil and political rights" (adopted in
    December, 1966) says: "All nations have a right to self-determination.

    As part of that right they are free to establish their political status
    and ensure their economic, social and cultural development. All the
    states participating in this Pact... must encourage the implementation
    of the right to self-determination and respect that right as provided
    for by the UN Charter".

    The Soviet Union was one of the participants.

    It was on that international-legal ground that on November 19 1989
    the US Senate approved the second Resolution on Nagorno Karabakh,
    supporting its people's will to be reunited with Armenia.

    The Resolution said in part: "Taking into consideration the fact that
    80 percent of Armenians living on the territory of the Autonomous
    Region of Nagorno Karabakh (ARNK), have expressed their concerns... and
    the ARNK Special Administration Committee proved to be ineffective
    ...it is necessary to assist in the course of bilateral discussions
    with the Soviet Union to fair settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict, a settlement that would truly reflect the will of the people
    in that region."

    Another fundamental document American law-makers were guided by was
    the "Declaration on the principles of international law" (October
    24, 1970), stating the right to "the creation of a sovereign and
    independent state, freedom to join an independent state or unification
    with it, or establishment of any other political status ".

    Today's political map and contours of borders are the result of
    implementation of the national right to self-determination.

    A question naturally comes up: then how was the principle of
    territorial integrity defined by law-makers in 1989?

    The nuance is that this principle was interpreted exceptionally
    on the background of defending states from foreign aggression. The
    implementation of the principle of territorial integrity was in fact
    subordinate to nations' right to self-determination, stated in the
    Declaration on the principles of international law.

    The very fact that more than 30 new states have been recognized
    only within the past 20 years, demonstrates that the formation of
    independent entities of international law is a continuous process and
    that it is done based on the principle of national self-determination.

    Or, if put otherwise, based on the volatility of state borders.

    By the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union international law was
    interpreted quite unambiguously and clearly. And the first document
    allowing for reunification of Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia was adopted
    21 years ago in Washington.




    From: A. Papazian
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