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BAKU: UK Policy On Nagorno-Karabakh Unchanged, Embassy Says After MP

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  • BAKU: UK Policy On Nagorno-Karabakh Unchanged, Embassy Says After MP

    UK POLICY ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH UNCHANGED, EMBASSY SAYS AFTER MPS' MEETING WITH SEPARATIST REGIME REP

    AzerNews, Azerbaijan
    Sept 20 2013

    20 September 2013, 10:31 (GMT+05:00)

    By Sara Rajabova

    The UK Embassy in Azerbaijan has said a meeting of UK parliament
    members with representatives from "Nagorno-Karabakh authorities"
    was arranged by the Armenian authorities.

    "We are aware of a group of UK parliamentarians visiting Armenia
    where the delegation met with representatives of the de-facto
    'Nagorno-Karabakh authorities'," the Embassy said on September 19.

    "The UK government has no control over who individual MPs decide
    to meet."

    According to the diplomatic mission, this does not represent a change
    in UK policy on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    "The UK does not recognize the de-facto 'Nagorno-Karabakh authorities'
    or their declaration of independence. The UK supports Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity and the OSCE Minsk Group-led peace process.

    Finally, we encourage Azerbaijan and Armenia to accelerate efforts to
    achieve a negotiated settlement based on the principles of refraining
    from the threat or use of force, territorial integrity and peoples'
    right to self-determination," the Embassy said.

    Members of the Armenia-UK parliamentary friendship group Stephen
    Pound and John Whittingdale recently met with representative of the
    separatist regime of Nagorno-Karabakh Karen Mirzoyan.

    Azerbaijan has repeatedly warned foreign officials and diplomats
    over visits to the Azerbaijani territory occupied by Armenia, saying
    this contradicts international law. The Foreign Ministry has stated
    that such visits, paid without prior notification of the relevant
    authorities of Azerbaijan, are illegal and damaging to the settlement
    process on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Earlier, the Foreign Ministry released a list of those declared persona
    non grata over illegal visits to the Armenian-occupied territories,
    which included 335 people.

    The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict emerged in 1988 when Armenia made
    territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Since a lengthy war in the early
    1990s that displaced over one million Azerbaijanis, Armenian armed
    forces have occupied over 20 percent of Azerbaijan's internationally
    recognized territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent
    regions. The UN Security Council's four resolutions on Armenian
    withdrawal have not been enforced to this day.

    Peace talks, mediated by Russia, France and the U.S. through the OSCE
    Minsk Group, are underway on the basis of a peace outline proposed
    by the Minsk Group co-chairs and dubbed the Madrid Principles. The
    negotiations have been largely fruitless so far.

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