Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian-Azeri Dialogue: The Karabakh Factor In The Opening Of Turke

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian-Azeri Dialogue: The Karabakh Factor In The Opening Of Turke

    ARMENIAN-AZERI DIALOGUE: THE KARABAKH FACTOR IN THE OPENING OF TURKEY BORDER
    By Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow correspondent

    Underlying processes in the Karabakh settlement draw a multitude
    of opinions and comments. New arguments and directions appear in
    the negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, namely that the
    border between Turkey and Armenia could have been opened without the
    parliamentary ratifications of the normalization agreements signed
    between Yerevan and Ankara last October (but stalled in the two
    countries' parliaments). But Azerbaijan insists that this should happen
    after the withdrawal of Armenian troops from some districts surrounding
    the former Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous region now controlled by the
    Karabakh military.

    Deputy Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Araz Azimov stated recently
    that the border could be opened after the Armenian pullback from five
    districts and the Lachin corridor and that "this would show the good
    intentions of official Baku towards Yerevan." "The opening of the
    border could become a major instrument for the start of trilateral
    trade between Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan or for cooperation in
    some other sphere," he said.

    Vladimir Kazimirov, a former Russian chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group,
    an international format co-headed by Russia, the United States and
    France that advances a negotiated peace in the Karabakh conflict,
    issued a tough statement in this regard, calling on Baku to proceed
    on the basis of the current reality. "Now it is being erased from
    memory how many Armenians there were in Nakhijevan. Imagine that they
    want to go back there and do so within a short term. What will Baku
    say to that? What is the use of repeating who lived where and in
    what number centuries ago? One should shape attitudes based on the
    current situation rather than the situation that existed a century
    ago," said Kazimirov.

    The former Karabakh negotiator also noted that none of the documents
    say that Armenia committed aggression. "One can often hear complaints
    in Azerbaijan that the international community does not properly
    demand the [Armenian] withdrawal from occupied lands. But the fact
    is that many states and international organizations do not have such
    a simplistic view of this intricate conflict as the Baku propaganda
    is trying to present," said Kazimirov, pointing out that it wasn't an
    armed attack by Armenians, but was a more complex and multidimensional
    escalation of mutual hostility.

    In an interview with RFE/RL's Armenian Service this week United States
    Ambassador to Armenia Marie Yovanovitch said she didn't think any
    country demanded that the parties to the Karabakh conflict should make
    unilateral concessions that would threaten their national security.

    Rather, she said, any agreements between the sides either in the format
    of the OSCE Minsk Group or any other format, should be reached on the
    basis of their interests. However, the ambassador stressed, the parties
    should realize that mutual concessions are needed for a solution.

    It is clear that an attempt to establish relations and open the border
    without concluding ultimate agreements and solving territorial problems
    is being made both in the Karabakh settlement and the Armenian-Turkish
    process. Director of the European program of the International Crisis
    Group Sabine Fraizer stated the expedience of opening the border
    before the ratification of the protocols. "Armenia is trying to
    achieve it without any preconditions, Turkey is doing everything to
    'win' at least two districts for Azerbaijan," said Fraizer.
Working...
X