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  • Medvedev, Aliyev, Sargsyan start talks

    Itar-Tass, Russia
    March 5 2011

    Medvedev, Aliyev, Sargsyan start talks

    05.03.2011, 13.07



    SOCHI, March 5 (Itar-Tass) - Presidents of Russia, Azerbaijan and
    Armenia, Dmitry Medvedev, Ilkham Aliyev and Serzh Sargsyan, have begun
    talks at the Krasnaya Polyana ski resort.

    The presidents are expected to discuss pressing issues during the
    working dinner.

    The Nagorno-Karabakh settlement will be central of the talks.

    On February 3, Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said
    the Sochi March 5 meeting of the presidents of Russia, Armenia and
    Azerbaijan would determine further steps towards the Nagorno-Karabakh
    settlements.

    `In 2010 the tripartite meetings [involving the presidents of Russia,
    Azerbaijan and Armenia] were held in Sochi on January 25, in St.
    Petersburg on June 17 and in Astrakhan on October 27. In our view,
    these contacts allowed the parties to bring closer their positions and
    facilitated the strengthening of confidence-building measures,' the
    diplomat said.

    `While in Astrakhan, the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia
    expressed readiness to continue their work on key principles of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh settlement on the basis of a project, which had been
    discussed there,' the spokesman noted.

    `We believe that at the upcoming Sochi March 5 meeting, the presidents
    will have chances to review the situation in between the summit and
    determine further concrete steps in order to find mutually acceptable
    solutions to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem,' Lukashevich pointed out.

    The landlocked mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh is the subject
    of an unresolved dispute between Azerbaijan, in which it lies, and its
    ethnic Armenian majority, backed by neighbouring Armenia.

    In 1988, towards the end of Soviet rule, Azerbaijani troops and
    Armenian secessionists began a bloody war, which left the de facto
    independent state in the hands of ethnic Armenians when a truce was
    signed in 1994.

    Negotiations have so far failed to produce a permanent peace
    agreement, and the dispute remains one of post-Soviet Europe's "frozen
    conflicts." With the break-up of the Soviet Union, in late 1991,
    Karabakh declared itself an independent republic, further escalating
    the conflict into a full-scale war. That de facto status has not been
    recognised elsewhere.

    In a December 2006 referendum, declared illegitimate by Azerbaijan,
    the region approved a new constitution. Nonetheless, there have since
    been signs of life in the peace process, with occasional meetings
    between the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents. Significant progress
    was reported at talks between the leaders in May and November 2009,
    but progress then stalled, and tension began rising again as of 2010.

    The OSCE Minsk Group was created in 1992 by the Conference on Security
    and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE, now Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe (OSCE)) to encourage a peaceful, negotiated
    resolution to the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The Minsk Group is headed by Russia, France and the
    United States.

    An additional format had been created over the Karabakh settlement -
    Russia plays a mediating role. The presidents of three countries met
    in Astrakhan in October 2010.

    They adopted a joint declaration after the meeting. `This is a special
    declaration on the enhancement of confidence-building measures,'
    Medvedev said, adding that the document envisioned `an exchange of
    prisoners of war and the return of the bodies.'

    `Having confirmed the provisions of the joint Declaration signed in
    Moscow on November 2, 2008, the presidents stressed that the
    resolution of the conflict by political and diplomatic means requires
    further efforts to strengthen the ceasefire and military
    confidence-building measures,' the joint statement said.

    `To this end, the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed, as the
    first step, to exchange prisoners of war and return the bodies of
    those killed without delay with the assistance of the co-chairmen of
    the OSCE Minsk Group and the International Committee of the Red Cross,
    as well as to be guided by these approaches in the future, proceeding
    from the solely humanitarian nature of such issues,' the document
    said.

    Moscow has suggested preliminarily fixing the progress reached in
    respect of the document on the basic principles of Nagorno-Karabakh
    settlement within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.

    `The continuing work on the so-called basic principles has produced
    certain results in finding the formula that can allow the parties to
    fix their consent at this point,' Lavrov said earlier.

    He said, however, that this did not mean that the problem would be
    solved once the basic principles were approved.

    `The parties are taking part in this work with a clear understanding
    that after the basic principles it would be necessary to draft a legal
    document - a peace agreement - anyway,' Lavrov added.

    `Not all of the basic principles have been agreed, but as far as a
    considerable portion of the text there is an understanding that we
    have practically reached compromised-based formula,' the minister
    said.

    `We proposed a very simple thing that two or three questions that have
    not been agreed yet should be stated as requiring further discussion
    and that it should be written that no final agreement can be reached
    without these questions,' Lavrov said.

    `At this point this would make it possible to fix the progress reached
    on the overwhelming portion of the text and thus state what has been
    achieved up to date,' he said.

    `We were supported by the co-chairmen. We hope that such realistic
    approach based on a pragmatic assessment of the current situation will
    eventually be supported,' Lavrov said.

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    might be settled only by a referendum.

    `I'm sure that the conflict may be settled only by peaceful means. And
    the only way is to conduct a referendum in Nagorno-Karabakh or to
    recognise the results of the 1991 referendum, which was held in full
    compliance with the Soviet Union legislation and international law,'
    Sargsyan said.




    From: A. Papazian
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