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  • Moscow prepares proposals on Karabakh

    RusData Dialine - Russian Press Digest, Russia
    July 8, 2011 Friday

    Moscow prepares proposals on Karabakh

    by Sokhbet Mamedov
    Nezavisimaya Gazeta


    HIGHLIGHT: In Baku, Sergey Lavrov will talk about a new meeting
    between the three presidents


    Today, Russia's foreign affairs minister will travel to Azerbaijan on
    a short work visit. In Baku, he will hold talks with representatives
    of the country's leadership, in the course of which various approaches
    to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement should be addressed. But
    according to the head of the Center for Political Innovations and
    Technologies, Mubariz Ahmedoglu, the main objective of Lavrov's visit
    is to organize another meeting between the Russian, Azerbaijani and
    Armenian presidents.

    Foreign Affairs Minister Sergey Lavrov's visit was unscheduled.
    Therefore, Azerbaijan's foreign affairs minister, Elmar Mamedyarov,
    was forced to cut short his tour of France and Italy and return to
    Baku. Nevertheless, the Azerbaijani minister was able to cross off all
    of the main items on the agenda. In particular, in Paris he was able
    to meet with French Foreign Affairs Minister Alain Juppe and discuss
    the prospects for resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, as well as
    France's new proposals.

    The details of the current meeting with Lavrov, just as those of the
    recent meeting between Lavrov and Armenian Foreign Affairs Minister
    Eduard Nalbandyan, are not being disclosed. Lavrov is known to believe
    that replacing the OSCE Minsk Group with any other structure would be
    impractical, as it "only diverts attention from the root of the
    problem." Meanwhile, experts say there is a possibility Moscow could
    make new proposals to Baku and Yerevan. Moreover, it should be noted
    that after the meeting in Kazan, which took place on June 24, the
    countries co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group did not take a time out, as
    they did before, instead deciding to intensify the negotiating
    process.

    This position was fully supported by the European Union, whose high
    representative for foreign affairs and security policy, Catherine
    Ashton, confirmed last Wednesday that the EU supports the mediating
    role of Russia, and the personal involvement of President Dmitry
    Medvedev, in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
    According to Ashton, US President Barack Obama, Medvedev and French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy's joint statement in Deauville indicated
    that the time has come to reach an agreement, the absence of which
    would cast doubt on the parties' obligations.

    "The relations between the two states are complicated," said Ashton.
    "The co-chairmen fully inform me and the European External Action
    Service on the work that has been accomplished by them, and the many
    difficulties they encounter. But despite this fact, the parties need
    to double their efforts in order to reach an agreement before the end
    of this year."

    >From her statement, it can be concluded that the countries co-chairing
    the OSCE Minsk Group will no longer tolerate further delay in finding
    an agreement on the basic principles, and want to complete the process
    this year. According to Azerbaijani analysts, the reasons for the
    mediator's haste are understandable - next year, elections will be
    held in a number of countries that are taking part in the negotiating
    process, which will reduce interest in the Karabakh problem.

    It is in this context that we should view Lavrov's unscheduled visit
    to Baku, the goal of which, says the head of the Center for Political
    Innovations and Technologies, Mubariz Ahmedoglu, is to schedule
    another meeting between the presidents of Russia, Azerbaijan and
    Armenia.

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