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Experts: Conflict Over Karabakh Can Be "Managed" But Is Unlikely To

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  • Experts: Conflict Over Karabakh Can Be "Managed" But Is Unlikely To

    EXPERTS: CONFLICT OVER KARABAKH CAN BE "MANAGED" BUT IS UNLIKELY TO BE RESOLVED

    17:13 03/10/2013 " POLITICS

    Panorama has interviewed Thomas De Waal, expert on the South Caucasus
    at Carnegie Endowment and Dennis Sammut, Director of the British
    LINKS NGO, on the current stage of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.

    We consulted the experts on whether the appointment of the new American
    co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group James Warlick could be interpreted
    as a revival of Madrid Principles and whether any new policies could
    be expected towards the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution.

    According to Thomas de Waal, by the nomination of a new full-time
    mediator Jim Warlick the United States has signaled that it wants to
    put new energy into the negotiations.

    "The first issue on the agenda for the Minsk Group co-chairs is to
    get a direct bilateral meeting between Presidents Aliev and Sargsyan.

    Given the firm control each leader has over decision-making processes,
    nothing can start without that. But there is a big deficit of trust
    between the two men and each side has also signaled that it does not
    want to make any significant new concessions on the Basic Principles
    document. I think Warlick's trip is the first important test as to
    whether the parties will be receptive to any new ideas," De Waal noted.

    Dennis Sammut said that the Madrid Principles still remain the
    basis for negotiations and added, - "In truth the problem is not the
    principles but how to go about realizing them. Here I think there is
    scope for new ideas and new initiatives. I believe the co-Chair of
    the OSCE Minsk Process need to be bolder in their approach."

    The experts do not foresee any major changes in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict resolution process before the end of this year. De Waal thinks
    that the completion of the election in Azerbaijan should theoretically
    be the stimulus for new efforts in the Nagorno Karabakh peace process;
    however he assesses the underlying dynamics of the process as rather
    negative.

    "Even though the "Madrid Principles" have been discussed for more than
    five years, the positions of the two parties on the central issue -
    the final status of Karabakh itself - remain almost irreconcilable.

    This leaves us with the continuing reality that the conflict over
    Karabakh will be "managed" but is unlikely to be resolved," said
    De Waal.

    Mr. Sammut said that even though another meeting between Foreign
    Ministers may take place before the end of the year, these meetings
    are not enough; he likewise stressed the importance of a new meeting
    between the two Presidents. "It is unlikely that such meeting can take
    place before the end of the year, but preparations for it should start
    immediately after the presidential elections in Azerbaijan next month,"
    Sammut said.

    Asked whether he thinks the concerns of the Karabakh Armenians are
    taken into account in the current negotiation process, Sammut said that
    Karabakh should not become some abstract conversation on constitutional
    or legal issues but the discussion should focus on the people involved.

    "It is first and foremost about the people who have suffered because
    of the conflict. I do not believe in boycotts and blockades, since
    these instruments tend to lead to further entrenchment of hard-line
    positions. What we need is more compromise, more flexibility and more
    creative thinking so that the current impasse can be broken. That is
    why I support people-to-people contacts," said the director of LINKS.

    He also stressed the role of the international community in
    facilitating this process.

    "The international community needs to find a way in which it can
    interact with the people of Nagorno-Karabakh without in any way
    pre-empting the negotiations... A framework to enable humanitarian
    assistance to reach whoever needs it has to be agreed. I think this
    issue should be brought up higher on the agenda in discussions and
    negotiations. There needs to be a neutral way in which people can visit
    Nagorno-Karabakh and see things for themselves. I do not believe that
    isolating people helps solve the problem," Dennis Sammut concluded.

    Source: Panorama.am



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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