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Russian Church To Continue Karabakh Peace Efforts - Patriarch

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  • Russian Church To Continue Karabakh Peace Efforts - Patriarch

    RUSSIAN CHURCH TO CONTINUE KARABAKH PEACE EFFORTS - PATRIARCH

    RIA Novosti
    March 18, 2010
    Etchmiadzin

    The Russian Orthodox Church will continue its efforts to peacefully
    settle the Nagorny Karabakh problem, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and
    All Russia said Thursday.

    Nagorny Karabakh, an ethnically Armenian region in Azerbaijan, has had
    de facto independence since a brutal war between the South Caucasus
    neighbors in the early 1990s, and the two remain bitter foes despite
    ongoing peace efforts.

    "Churches carry their peacekeeping message to where our brothers and
    sisters suffer, to where there is danger of bloodshed," Kirill told
    journalists in the residence of the head of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church in the city of Etchmiadzin.

    "The church should not link its peacekeeping message to any political
    or pragmatic aims," he said while winding up his three-day visit
    to Armenia.

    A fragile ceasefire has been in place in the region since the war in
    early 1990s, which claimed more than 30,000 lives on both sides.

    Karabakh has since remained under Armenian control. Baku has fiercely
    opposed any decision on Karabakh that could be interpreted as giving
    the region independence from Azerbaijan.

    The Russian patriarch urged the soonest possible resolution of
    Armenia's problems with Azerbaijan and Turkey, adding that "keeping
    the fire of hatred is a path to nowhere."

    Patriarch Kirill on Wednesday paid tribute to the victims of the
    Armenian genocide, laying flowers at a memorial in Yerevan.

    Turkey has always refused to recognize the killings of an estimated
    1.5 million Armenians in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire in
    1915 as an act of genocide. A number of countries have recognized
    the killings in Armenia as the first genocide of the 20th century.
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