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MOSCOW: Uruguay Passes. Foreign Minister Luis Almagro Advocates Reco

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  • MOSCOW: Uruguay Passes. Foreign Minister Luis Almagro Advocates Reco

    URUGUAY PASSES. FOREIGN MINISTER LUIS ALMAGRO ADVOCATES RECOGNIZING NAGORNO-KARABAKH'S INDEPENDENCE
    by Yuriy Roks

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta
    Sept 12 2011
    Russia

    Uruguay may recognize the independence of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic. Luis Almagro, the country's foreign minister, declared this 9
    September at a conference in parliament devoted to Armenian-Uruguayan
    relations. Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman Elman Abdullayev
    told journalists that the republic's embassy in Argentina is trying to
    ascertain the circumstances in which this statement can have been made.

    According to Baku's information, a Uruguayan Foreign Ministry
    spokesman assured embassy employees in Argentina that Montevideo
    supports Azerbaijan's territorial integrity and the OSCE's activity
    in settling the conflict. The Azerbaijani side also expressed the
    opinion that the rumours about Uruguay recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh's
    independence may be an element of Armenia's disinformation policy.

    However, Mario Nalbandian, cochairman of the CIS countries' Socialist
    International Committee (Argentina), who attended the conference
    in Montevideo, confirmed that Luis Almagro spoke about recognizing
    Karabakh. According to him, the Uruguayan foreign minister declared
    literally the following: "Nagorno-Karabakh must be independent and,
    in the course of time, be joined to Armenia. This is the only way
    to resolve the issue." Nalbandian also reported that Luis Almagro
    said that Karabakh is a historical part of Armenia and that Uruguay
    will examine at state level the question of an agreement with the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic to recognize the republic.

    Armenian media were provided with the same information from Montevideo
    by Vaan Ovanesyan, deputy of the Armenian parliament and head of the
    Dashnaktsutyun Armenian Revolutionary Federation faction, who called
    the statement unprecedented. It was made in the presence of the
    country's vice president, the chairman of parliament, and deputies,
    Ovanesyan reported. At the same time he remarked that the statement
    "is the result of many years' work, which will be continued to ensure
    that the decision is adopted at state level."

    Relations between Uruguay and Armenia, despite the distance and the
    apparent lack of anything in common, are unique. Uruguay was the first
    country in the world to recognize the genocide against Armenians in
    Ottoman Turkey. Afterward its example was followed by other countries.

    Despite its modest size and relatively small population, Uruguay
    (particularly in the first half of the 20th century) played an
    appreciable role on the political map of the world. Important
    conferences were held there, and multilateral agreements were
    adopted (for example, the Montevideo Convention -an international
    document defining a state's legal personality from the viewpoint of
    international public law -Nezavisimaya Gazeta), and Uruguay itself was
    very active on the international arena. With time the significance
    of this state on a world scale gradually began to diminish, and it
    found itself in the shadow of its larger neighbours and under the
    strong influence of the United States. However, when Jose Mujica, a
    representative of the left-wing forces, became president, Uruguay's
    desire to pursue a more independent and striking policy became
    apparent. Maybe the foreign minister's statement about the need to
    recognize the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is connected not only with
    the effective activity of Uruguay's influential Armenian community
    or Montevideo's desire to open a new page of history for Armenia for
    a second time but also with this state's political ambitions.

    Luis Almagro's statement could not go unnoticed in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. David Babayan, chief of the Main Information
    Administration in the Nagorno-Karabakh president's apparatus, told
    Nezavisimaya Gazeta: "We welcome Uruguay's intention to recognize our
    sovereignty... Almagro's words do not signify automatic recognition of
    independence but mean that the international community is serious about
    the process of recognizing the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, because the
    stage of recognizing new states, which began with Kosovo and continued
    with recognition of South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and South Sudan, cannot
    bypass Karabakh." In Babayan's opinion, there may be two consequences
    of recognizing the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's sovereignty: Azerbaijan
    and Turkey will begin a hysterical policy with regard to Uruguay;
    the world community, particularly South American states, will take a
    more serious approach to the problem of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

    At this stage the Armenian Foreign Ministry has not commented on what
    is happening in Montevideo. "Mr Almagro's statement cannot fail to
    inspire optimism, but a comment by the Armenian Foreign Ministry may
    follow later," an official spokesman for the ministry told Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta. Other Armenian power structures are also keeping quiet. This
    stance has been criticized by the opposition. Stepan Safaryan, head
    of the Heritage parliamentary faction, said that "Yerevan attaches
    greater importance to suggestions by OSCE Minsk Group member countries
    than to such historic opportunities."

    Berlin political analyst Ashot Manucharyan believes that Almagro's
    statement may move to a practical plane because this country,
    like other prominent Latin American countries, "is not dependent
    on relations with Turkey and is not a NATO member, and there is no
    strong Turkish community on the continent." "The influence of Islamic
    diasporas here is almost zero. On the other hand, from the end of
    the 19th century Armenian refugees from the Ottoman Empire became
    an important part of the political, cultural, and intellectual
    establishment of Latin America. The communities are very active,
    particularly in Argentina and Uruguay, and this activeness expresses
    itself in the fact that it was from here that international recognition
    of genocide began, and these countries were the first to recognize
    Armenia's independence and have now started speaking about the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's sovereignty," Doctor Manucharyan said.

    At the same time the political analyst did not rule out the possibility
    that Ankara and Baku "will start bargaining with Montevideo" -that
    is, Uruguay confines itself just to this statement, while Turkey
    and Azerbaijan or their allies, primarily the United States, offer
    some preferences in return. "Such political trading is a normal
    phenomenon. In any case the continuation of history depends on
    what Uruguay, which has made an interesting move, really wants,"
    Manucharyan told Nezavisimaya Gazeta.

    Washington has not yet revealed its position. Keith Bean, press
    secretary at the US Embassy in Azerbaijan, said that the statement
    (Almagro's statement -Nezavisimaya Gazeta) is within the direct
    sphere of Baku and Montevideo: "We do not comment on other countries'
    bilateral relations."




    From: A. Papazian
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