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OSCE MG trying to resurrecting Stalinism in a single region alone

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  • OSCE MG trying to resurrecting Stalinism in a single region alone

    Ara Papian: OSCE MG trying to resurrecting Stalinism in a single region alone


    March 26, 2011 - 10:32 AMT 06:32 GMT
    PanARMENIAN.Net -

    One of the most important fundaments of maintaining order is
    functioning within one's own mandate, within one's own area of
    authority. This applies as well, without any qualifications, to bodies
    established as per international law and working in the realm of
    international relations, head of Head of the Modus Vivendi Centre,
    historian Ara Papian said in his article titled `The Co-chairs are
    Simply the Mediators or, An Attempt at Resurrecting Stalinism in a
    Single Region Alone.'

    `Nevertheless, it appears that this simple truth is being dismissed
    ever increasingly by the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. The latest
    testament to such an approach is the expression `the seven occupied
    territories of Azerbaijan surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh (NK)' found in
    the report of the co-chairs of the 24th of March, 2011. It is evident
    that, by such phrasing, this group has clearly functioned outside of
    its authority and violated its own mandate,' Mr. Papian said.

    `No-one has authorised this group of co-chairs to decide the status or
    fate of any piece of territory. Who has given that group the right to
    even equate what they refer to as `Nagorno-Karabakh' with the former
    Autonomous Oblast of Mountainous Karabakh of the erstwhile USSR? That
    is to be decided by the parties in dispute. The authority of the
    co-chairs is limited to mediation, that is, to benefit the process of
    negotiations founded on the exclusion of the use of force. That is
    absolutely and clearly codified in the mandate of the co-chairs of the
    Minsk Group: `Promoting a resolution of the conflict without the use
    of force and in particular facilitating negotiations for a peaceful
    and comprehensive settlement' [Mandate of the Co-Chairmen of the
    Conference on Nagorno-Karabakh under the auspices of OSCE (`Minsk
    Group', Vienna, 23 March 1995, DOC.525/95)]'. None of the fifteen
    clauses of this mandate provide for the co-chairs to come to some
    final decision or to make any sort of ruling on anything.'

    He went on saying: `It is even more extraordinary and perfectly
    baseless to refer to territories surrounding the former Autonomous
    Oblast of Mountainous Karabakh as `territories of Azerbaijan'. I
    imagine that the co-chairs, as high-ranking and experienced diplomats,
    are more aware than I am that the legal possession of any territory in
    international law is decided by the title to territory and not by
    administrative boundaries. If they or anyone else could cite any
    international legal document - again, any international, and, again,
    any legal document, as opposed to the decision of some political party
    - that the title to even a square inch of the current territory of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic has ever been recognised as belonging to the
    Republic of Azerbaijan, I would publicly apologise for my ignorance.
    And if that cannot be done, then I am correct and consequently no one,
    and certainly not any mediating group, has the right to make use of
    such baseless wording.'

    `A question may arise: what kind of phrasing to use, then? I believe
    it would be most appropriate to say, `the territories adjacent to
    former the Autonomous Oblast of Mountainous Karabakh', without
    mentioning `Azerbaijan', as the AOMK (or NKAO, to use its Russian
    abbreviation) was an autonomous unit within the Soviet Union, which
    was subject to the entire country's authority in an indirect manner;
    that is to say, it was an administrative unit of the USSR through yet
    another administrative unit of the USSR. As a reminder, the Soviet
    Union had a four-tier administrative organisation and, independent of
    the tier level of the administrative unit, each administrative unit
    was considered the same in terms of title: all of those administrative
    units were subject to one and the same authority, namely, the
    sovereignty of the USSR,' Mr. Papian said.

    `Let me also emphasise that the administrative boundaries set by
    Stalin could never act as legal bases for the delimitation of
    frontiers of states, as international law makes clear, that ex injuria
    jus non oritur, that is, law does not arise out of injustice. And let
    me remind the forgetful that the very OSCE which authorised the
    co-chairs equated Stalinism with Nazism in its resolution `Divided
    Europe Reunited' at Vilnius on the 3rd of July, 2009. Is anyone in
    Europe ready today to return to the boundaries set by Hitler? So why
    would one think that it is acceptable to resurrect the crimes carried
    out by Stalin in the southern Caucasus?'




    From: A. Papazian
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