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EU urges progress in Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks

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  • EU urges progress in Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks

    Agence France Presse
    March 2, 2010 Tuesday 6:19 PM GMT

    EU urges progress in Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks

    BAKU, March 2 2010


    Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos called on Europe's
    behalf Tuesday for progress in peace talks on the disputed Nagorny
    Karabakh region and in reconciliation efforts between Armenia and
    Turkey.

    Visiting arch-rivals Armenia and Azerbaijan, Moratinos -- whose
    country holds the six-month rotating European Union presidency -- said
    the EU wants to see "a quick settlement" in the conflict over
    Karabakh.

    "If both countries show good will, this conflict can be settled
    peacefully. We should use all possibilities and resources to resolve
    this conflict," he said after talks in Baku with his Azerbaijani
    counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov.

    Backed by Yerevan, ethnic Armenian forces seized control of Nagorny
    Karabakh and seven surrounding districts from Azerbaijan in the early
    1990s, in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

    The two countries have failed to negotiate a settlement on Karabakh
    and tensions remain high, with the defence ministry in Yerevan saying
    Tuesday that an Armenian soldier had been killed in fighting near the
    disputed region.

    Moratinos earlier Tuesday met with Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard
    Nalbandian in Yerevan, where he called on Turkey and Armenia to speed
    up stalled reconciliation efforts by ratifying two protocols they
    signed in October to establish diplomatic ties and reopen a shared
    border.

    "The EU urges Armenia and Turkey to ratify the protocols in a
    reasonable time and without preconditions," Moratinos said.

    The signing of the deals was hailed internationally as a key step in
    overcoming decades of enmity stemming from World War I-era massacres
    of Armenians under Ottoman Turks.

    But ratification by both countries' parliaments has stalled as the two
    sides have traded accusations of trying to modify the deal.

    Moratinos was also due to visit Georgia Wednesday as part of a two-day
    visit to the volatile South Caucasus region on behalf of EU foreign
    affairs chief Catherine Ashton.
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