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ISTANBUL: European Parliament And Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • ISTANBUL: European Parliament And Nagorno-Karabakh

    EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND NAGORNO-KARABAKH
    AMANDA PAUL

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=278159
    April 22 2012
    Turkey

    Of all the EU institutions, it is the European Parliament that has
    taken the lead in pushing the EU to play a greater role in the South
    Caucasus, recognizing the importance of creating an essential role
    for a region of considerable geostrategic importance.

    In May 2010, the European Parliament adopted a resolution on "the need
    for an EU Strategy for the South Caucasus." While supporting existing
    EU initiatives such as the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) and the
    Eastern Partnership, the European Parliament called for an increasingly
    active role from the EU to transform the South Caucasus into a region
    of sustainable peace, stability and prosperity with an aim to enhance
    the integration of these countries with European policies. While one
    cannot say all of the recommendations were picked up and acted on by
    the EU, the EU has progressively strengthened its ties with the region,
    now negotiating Association Agreements with all three countries. These
    agreements, once ratified, would substantially deepen the level of
    economic and political ties between the two partners, which in turn
    should help to strengthen democracy.

    Turning to Nagorno-Karabakh, an internationally recognized region of
    Azerbaijan, the EU, for right or for wrong, has always tried to take
    a balanced approach in dealing with Azerbaijan and Armenia on this
    issue. While the EU has been unable to have a seat in the negotiations
    to resolve the two-decade old conflict, as this is carried out by
    France, being one of the Organization for Security and Co-operation
    in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group co-chairs, the EU has tried to play
    a stronger role through civil society activity and has financed
    confidence-building measures aimed at improving people-to-people
    contacts, particularly amongst youth. Looking for additional ways in
    which to help stimulate a solution, some EU actors seem to believe
    there is an opportunity to use the Association Agreements to this end.

    Both Azerbaijan and Armenia are interested in strengthening ties with
    the EU. Negotiations on the Association Agreements were launched in
    July 2010 and so far 24 out of the 28 negotiations have been closed
    with Armenia, while some 13 with Azerbaijan.

    Earlier this week, the European Parliament adopted resolutions on
    these two Association Agreements. The parliamentary resolutions make
    recommendations to the European Council and Commission on lines to
    take during the negotiations. While neither is obliged to take up
    the recommendations, since the Lisbon Treaty came into force the
    role of the European Parliament has been strengthened, meaning that
    for such agreements to come into force they also need to be signed
    off on and ratified in the European Parliament as well as in the 27
    national parliaments.

    The two resolutions point out that the implementation of these
    agreements should make the region safer, both by promoting the
    peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and by making EU
    support conditional on their human rights performance and democratic
    reforms. While it calls on both parties to do more to bring about
    a solution to the Karabakh conflict and condemns spiraling military
    spending, it also calls on EU member states to stop supplying Armenia
    and Azerbaijan with weapons.

    Moreover, the resolutions draw a direct link between the signing of the
    agreement and the progress in the OSCE Minsk Group talks on a set of
    basic principles the two sides are presently working towards, stating
    the negotiations on the EU-Azerbaijani and EU-Armenian Association
    Agreements should be "linked to credible commitments to making
    substantial progress towards the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict, including, for example, confidence-building measures such as
    general demilitarisation, the withdrawal of snipers from the line of
    contact, the withdrawal of Armenian forces from occupied territories
    surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh and their return to Azerbaijani control,
    and a mechanism for active incident-prevention and the investigation
    of cease-fire violations along the line of contact, the right of all
    internally displaced persons and refugees to return to their home
    settlements and properties and international security guarantees that
    would include a genuine multinational peacekeeping operation in order
    to create suitable conditions for the future legally-binding free
    expression of will concerning the final status of Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Indeed, in theory, using the Association Agreement to progress the
    stalled Nagorno-Karabakh talks would seem like a good move. However,
    the initiative was not welcomed by those in the EU's External Action
    Service, by the EU special representative for the South Caucasus,
    by a number of EU member states, or by Armenia. Because Association
    Agreements are seen as a tool to help bring about the democratic
    transformation of a country, there is fear that linking it to Karabakh
    will kill both processes. Moreover, it is claimed that Azerbaijan is
    not as interested as Yerevan in an Association Agreement and that it
    is thereby an unfair linkage.

    Nevertheless, even though the idea may not have broad EU support,
    the fact the finalized Agreement would need to be ratified by the
    European Parliament may have consequences in the long term.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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