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From The South Caucasus To South America: More Tensions Over El Kara

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  • From The South Caucasus To South America: More Tensions Over El Kara

    FROM THE SOUTH CAUCASUS TO SOUTH AMERICA: MORE TENSIONS OVER EL KARABAJ

    EurasiaNet.org
    Nov 19 2012
    NY

    November 19, 2012 - 11:36am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Uruguay may be best known these days for its government's push to
    become a "leading pot dealer," but it will need much more than cannabis
    to make peace with Azerbaijan over a recent trip by Uruguayan lawmakers
    to breakaway Nagorno Karabakh.

    The decades-long row between Azerbaijan and Armenia about Karabakh
    has been increasingly playing out in Latin America, with Yerevan
    seeking supporters for the territory's independence from Azerbaijan,
    and Baku working to nip such ideas in the bud.

    Uruguay, with one of Latin America's largest Armenian Diasporas and
    a track record of having already recognized as genocide the Ottoman
    Empire's slaughter of ethnic Armenians, has now found itself in the
    middle of this tug-of-war.

    After arriving in Yerevan early last week, Uruguayan House of
    Representatives Speaker Jorge Orrico and other delegates hopped
    over to Karabakh to meet de-facto leader Bako Sahakian and other
    local officials.

    In comments similar to an earlier statement by Uruguay's foreign
    minister, Luis Almagro, Orrico expressed support for Karabakh,
    but stopped short of making unequivocal promises to recognize the
    territory.

    Still, it was enough to rile Baku.

    In an ongoing ping-pong exchange of diplomatic notes, Montevideo
    on November 19 tried to reassure Azerbaijan about the depths of its
    respect; without, that is, failing to mention its "deep and traditional
    contacts" with Azerbaijani foe Armenia.

    Arguably, it's those "deep and traditional contacts" which may present
    a key sore point for Azerbaijan these days.

    Speaking on November 17 to members of his ruling Yeni Azerbaijan Party,
    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev denounced (as he has before) "the
    Armenian lobby," a term usually applied to Armenian Diaspora groups,
    as "our main enemy," Trend.az reported.

    What Uruguay, with its support for Armenian-Diaspora-promoted
    initiatives, makes of such reasoning is not clear. But perhaps that
    will come in lesson two of this crash course on Caucasus Conflicts.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66199

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