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  • Baku Hails U.N. Vote, Armenia Not Worried

    BAKU HAILS U.N. VOTE, ARMENIA NOT WORRIED

    United Press International UPI
    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/10/27/Baku-hails-UN-vote-Armenia-not-worried/UPI-87371319711100/?spt=hs&or=tn
    Oct 27 2011

    BAKU, Azerbaijan, Oct. 27 (UPI) -- Azerbaijan hailed its election
    to the U.N. Security Council this week while an Armenian leader said
    the vote won't much affect the countries' strained relations.

    After 17 rounds of voting Monday, the U.N. General Assembly selected
    Azerbaijan as the Security Council's non-permanent representative
    for Eastern Europe, prevailing over fellow finalist Slovenia.

    Azerbaijan received 155 votes from U.N. member countries -- 26 more
    than the 129 votes necessary for accession to the two-year Security
    Council position.

    Slovenia, which polled 77 votes to Baku's 116 in the 16th round,
    dropped out of the running after that, opening the way to what
    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev called a historic event for
    his nation.

    "This is a great victory indeed," Aliyev told the Russian news agency
    RIA Novosti. "The U.N. Security Council is the most authoritative
    structure in the world and Azerbaijan as an independent state is now
    a member of this structure."

    He thanked "all countries that put their trust in us, rely on us and
    have shown great respect for us," adding, "The number of our friends
    around the world is growing."

    Baku's status in 2012-13 will give it a chance to bring some of its
    issues to the fore -- including its troubles with Armenia over the
    disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

    Azerbaijan two years ago shepherded a non-binding resolution through
    the General Assembly referring to Armenian-occupied Karabakh as a part
    of Azerbaijan and demanding an "immediate, complete and unconditional
    withdrawal of Armenian forces" from occupied Azerbaijani lands,
    Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported.

    The resolution had strong support among Muslim nations.

    Aliyev didn't say Monday whether Baku would use its new perch to
    press the Nagorno-Karabakh issue but Azeri Member of Parliament
    Ganira Pashayeva told the Azeri-Press Agency the development "gives
    Azerbaijan the right to immediately include the issue on the violation
    of territorial integrity in the agenda of the U.N. Security Council."

    The seat, she said, will allow Baku a chance "to submit the issue
    of non-fulfillment of the resolutions adopted by the U.N. Security
    Council directly to the council's agenda. Thus, the council will pay
    more attention to this issue."

    Armenia didn't issue an official statement on Azerbaijan's accession to
    the Security Council. But some members of President Serzh Sargsyan's
    Republican Party of Armenia did indicate they believe development is
    unlikely to affect the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations, RFE/RL said.

    Lawmaker and Republican Party leader Eduard Sharmazanov said that
    while Azerbaijan won its U.N. post thanks to support from "Muslim and
    Third World countries," the vote "cannot have any serious influence
    on the resolution" of the dispute.

    Rather, he said, the ongoing talks conducted by the Minsk Group of
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe remain the
    decisive forum to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh argument, since its
    co-chairs -- the United States, Russia and France -- are permanent
    members of the Security Council.

    Those three countries wrapped up the latest round of the Minsk Group
    talks Monday in Yerevan, saying Armenia and Azerbaijan have tentatively
    agreed to jointly investigate ceasefire violations along their main
    "line of contact," RFL/RE reported.

    The co-chairs said the most recent rounds of talks focused on
    persuading the two sides to seek a way to tamp down recent incidences
    of violence along the still-simmering Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

    "The co-chairs offered several proposals for measures to enhance
    confidence in different fields," they said in a joint statement. "The
    sides agreed in principle on (a) draft mechanism to investigate
    incidents along the front lines that the co-chairs proposed in April,
    and which Presidents Aliyev, Sargsyan and (Dmitry) Medvedev (of Russia)
    agreed to pursue in their March joint statement in Sochi."

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