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Declarations About Some 'Higher Priority Principles' Are A Fiction:

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  • Declarations About Some 'Higher Priority Principles' Are A Fiction:

    DECLARATIONS ABOUT SOME 'HIGHER PRIORITY PRINCIPLES' ARE A FICTION: NAGORNO-KARABAKH MP

    arminfo
    August 12, 2011

    The declarations about some "higher priority principles" of the
    international law are a fiction, Vahram Atanessyan, the chairman of the
    Standing Committee on Foreign Relations of the National Assembly of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, said in an interview to ArmInfo, when
    asked to comment on a statement by Mubariz Gurbanly, representative
    of Azerbaijan's ruling party.

    More specifically, Gurbanly said that "the principles and the norms
    of the international law give priority to territorial integrity and
    sovereignty. That's why Azerbaijan's key demand during the Nagorno-
    Karabakh peace talks is its territorial integrity and sovereignty."

    According to Atanessyan, the Declaration on Principles of
    International Law adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1970 says:
    "In their interpretation and application the above principles are
    interrelated and each principle should be construed in the context
    of the other principles."

    "So, as you may see, the international law does not give priority
    to any principles as Mr.Gurbanly says. On the contrary, all of its
    principles are interrelated in their interpretation and application
    and none of them should be given priority over the others," Atanessyan
    said.

    Concerning the Kazan meeting Gurbanly said that "Ilham Aliyev
    reiterated during that meeting that Azerbaijan was ready to resolve
    the conflict in accordance with the international law and in the
    framework of its territorial integrity."

    "Let's drop the question how come Mr.Gurbanly knows what exactly
    President Aliyev said in Kazan and answer the question whether the
    international law guarantees 'Azerbaijan's territorial integrity and
    sovereignty' the way Mr.Gurbanly sees it. I would like to quote one
    more excerpt from the UN Declaration on Principles of International
    Law: 'Every State has the duty to refrain from any forcible action
    which deprives peoples referred to above in the elaboration of the
    present principle of their right to self-determination and freedom
    and independence. In their actions against, and resistance to, such
    forcible action in pursuit of the exercise of their right to self-
    determination, such peoples are entitled to seek and to receive support
    in accordance with the purposes and principles of the Charter,'"
    Atanessyan said.

    And so, according to the Nagorno-Karabakh parliamentarian, the
    international law obliges Azerbaijan, who joined the UN in March 1992,
    to refrain from any forcible action depriving the Armenians of Nagorno-
    Karabakh in the elaboration of the present principle of their right
    to self-determination and freedom and independence.

    "As State Secretary of Azerbaijan Lala Shevket-Gajiyeva admitted later,
    'Azerbaijan bombarded Stepanakert continuously for 120 days.' It was
    a forcible action aimed at depriving the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians
    from elaborating their right to self-determination. In their pursuit of
    the exercise of this right, the latter resisted Azerbaijan's forcible
    actions by organizing collective self-defense," Atanessyan said.

    Referring to the above-mentioned Declaration the MP said that the
    actions to elaborate the right to self-determination and to seek and
    receive assistance in so doing "shall not be construed as authorizing
    or encouraging any action which would dismember or impair, totally or
    in part, the territorial integrity or political unity of sovereign
    and independent States conducting themselves in compliance with
    the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples as
    described above and thus possessed of a government representing the
    whole people belonging to the territory without distinction as to
    race, creed or color." In this context, Atanessyan wonders if the
    independent Azerbaijan acted in accordance with the principle of
    equal rights and self-determination of peoples. His answer is no.

    "One of the first legal documents adopted by the newly independent
    Republic of Azerbaijan was the law on abolishing the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Autonomous District (November 24 1991), while the UN Declaration
    says that 'a government represents the whole people belonging to the
    territory.' So, if a government does not respect the principle of equal
    rights and self-determination of peoples, it does not represent the
    whole people. Consequently, the people whose self-determination right
    has been violated by the forcible actions of a government refusing
    to represent it can be no longer considered as 'belonging to the
    territory' claimed by that government," Atanessyan said.

    Thus, according to the MP, the international law gives priority not to
    irrational territorial integrity but to a specific territory ruled by a
    government "representing the whole people belonging to that territory"
    by respecting the principle of equal rights and self-determination
    of peoples.

    "Does the Government of the Republic of Azerbaijan represent the
    people/population of Nagorno-Karabakh? No. And the reason is known:
    from its very first day that government refused to respect the
    principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples. For the
    same reason the people/population of Nagorno-Karabakh does not belong
    to the territory referred to as integral by Azerbaijan."

    "According to Baku's logic, the people/population of Nagorno-Karabakh
    has the right to self-determination 'exclusively in the framework of
    Azerbaijan's territorial integrity. Let's see what the UN Declaration
    says: 'The establishment of a sovereign and independent State,
    the free association or integration with an independent State or the
    emergence into any other political status freely determined by a people
    constitute modes of implementing the right of self-determination by
    that people.' So, as we may see, the first mode of implementing the
    right of self-determination is 'the establishment of a sovereign and
    independent State,' followed by the free association or integration
    with an independent State or the emergence into any other political
    status freely determined by a people. The expression of the will of a
    people is defined by the mediators as the key mechanism for determining
    the final political status of Nagorno-Karabakh. And it was exactly
    because of Azerbaijan's free interpretations of the international
    law that there was no breakthrough in Kazan," Atanessyan said.

    Concerning Baku's official statement that "Azerbaijan has the right
    to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem by means of force," Atanessyan
    quoted the international law: "Every State likewise has the duty to
    refrain from the threat or use of force to violate international lines
    of demarcation, such as armistice lines, established by or pursuant
    to an international agreement to which it is a party or which it is
    otherwise bound to respect."

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