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Baku's Vagabond Shoes Take It To The UN Security Council

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  • Baku's Vagabond Shoes Take It To The UN Security Council

    BAKU'S VAGABOND SHOES TAKE IT TO THE UN SECURITY COUNCIL
    by Giorgi Lomsadze

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    Oct 26 2011

    And if Baku can make it there, it can make it anywhere . . . that's
    the tune Azerbaijani media are playing in an unabashed celebration of
    the country's becoming a non-permanent member of the United Nations
    Security Council this week.

    Azerbaijan's debut on the council is "a victory for the Azerbaijani
    people," declared Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov. But
    more than a symbolic victory, the membership placed Baku in a better
    position to shape the international debate about its long-running
    conflict with Armenia and separatists over breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Ali Hasanov, a senior presidential administration official, indicated
    that Baku will use its new position to bring Nagorno-Karabakh-related
    issues to the UN floor. "Capitalizing on the [two]-year-long membership
    of the UN Security Council, Azerbaijan will demand restoring norms
    of international law," he said, without elaboration, Regnum reported.

    Mammadyarov said that Baku will seek support for such initiatives
    from the main international negotiators in the conflict -- the US,
    France and Russia, all permanent members of the Security Council.

    Some Azerbaijani politicians could not help but gloat at sour faces in
    Armenia, Baku's arch-rival in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. "Armenia
    is seriously upset," asserted independent parliament member Rasim
    Musambekov.

    It probably is, but the Armenians are trying not to show it. Yerevan
    did not make an official statement about Azerbaijan's promotion, but
    one official claimed that the Security Council would not be swayed by
    Azerbaijan. The country's membership, he reasoned, will only damage
    the council's reputation.

    Note: Rasim Musambekov previously served as a board member of the
    Open Society Assistance Foundation-Azerbaijan, part of the Soros
    Foundations network. EurasiaNet.org operates under the auspices of
    the Open Society Institute, a separate part of that network.

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