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BAKU: Baku Says Yerevan Equivocating On Karabakh Proposals

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  • BAKU: Baku Says Yerevan Equivocating On Karabakh Proposals

    BAKU SAYS YEREVAN EQUIVOCATING ON KARABAKH PROPOSALS

    news.az
    May 12 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Elkhan Polukhov Armenia is ducking acceptance of the OSCE's Madrid
    principles for a Karabakh settlement, an Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry
    spokesman has said.

    Elkhan Polukhov was commenting to Interfax-Azerbaijan news agency
    today on remarks made by Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
    to the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers.

    'It is surprising that Armenia is ignoring nine meetings at the level
    of presidents held since 2007, that is, since the appearance of the
    Madrid proposals, and is also ignoring the fact that the updated Madrid
    document has been prepared and presented to the sides on the basis
    of the views and approaches of the conflict parties to this issue,'
    Polukhov said.

    In his Committee of Ministers speech yesterday, Nalbandian accused
    Azerbaijan of 'distorting the reasons, consequences and essence of
    the conflict'.

    Polukhov described Nalbandian's remarks as insinuation. 'Obviously,
    Armenia is using these insinuations to try to avoid giving a straight
    answer to the question whether it accepts the updated Madrid document,'
    he said.

    Azerbaijan has repeatedly expressed its position on the updated Madrid
    principles, the spokesman continued. 'This position is that we accept
    them with certain exceptions.'

    'If there were too many exceptions, we would never have accepted the
    document,' he continued. 'When there are more than 50% exceptions,
    any acceptance of a document is out of the question.'

    The updated version of the Madrid principles, put forward by the OSCE
    mediators in late 2009, has been the subject of mutual accusations
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan ever since.

    Baku accepts the updated principles in general, but 'there are
    elements that do not suit us', Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
    said in March. Nalbandian responded on 29 March that Armenia had
    accepted the OSCE's Madrid principles for a Karabakh settlement as
    a basis for talks two years ago.

    The Madrid principles include the return of the territories surrounding
    Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control, an interim status for Karabakh
    providing guarantees for security and self-governance, and the future
    determination of the final legal status of Nagorno-Karabakh through
    a legally binding expression of will. The status of Karabakh remains
    the biggest sticking point in the negotiations.
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