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  • One Kind Of Speeches And Other Kind Of Speeches

    ONE KIND OF SPEECHES AND OTHER KIND OF SPEECHES

    Monday, 16 February 2015 09:11

    Conflicts are different, but international law is one

    The UN Charter provides some principles; the right of nations to
    self-determination occupies a keynote place, and the territorial
    integrity and sovereignty must be respected. The Parliamentary Assembly
    passed a Declaration, clarifying the ratio between the fundamental
    principles of international law.

    It is confirmed there that sovereignty and territorial integrity are
    inviolable and that the countries, which claim to be respected, must
    respect the right of the nations living in these countries and avoid
    preventing the right to self-determination by the use of brute force".

    Agree, it is a wonderful quote, which could serve as a weighty concept
    for the settlement of the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict, in the
    process of resolution of which, first and foremost due to Azerbaijan's
    stance, two fundamental principles of the Helsinki Decalogue of 1975
    - the right of nations to self-determination and the principle of
    territorial integrity - are artificially clashed.Indeed, it could, but,
    alas, does not serve. As a consequence, many questions occur, one of
    which may sound like this: why couldn't the abovementioned postulate,
    which entirely corresponds to the classical law on international law,
    which is the basis of the modern system of international security,
    become the basis of the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict settlement? To
    answer this question, we will not continue maintaining the intrigue
    and will open the brackets.

    Shrewd and experienced readers have probably guessed that the
    above-cited phrase belongs to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of
    the Russian Federation, Sergey Lavrov, which he voiced at the recent
    International Security Conference in Munich. And he used it to parry
    the accusations against Russia of the "annexation of the Crimea" and
    violation of the keynote international standards. It is known that
    Moscow's position is that the secession of the Crimea from Ukraine and
    its reunification with Russia took place in accordance with the UN
    Charter and on the basis of a referendum, which did not take place,
    for example, during the secession of Kosovo from Serbia. In fact,
    from the legal point of view, Russia's position is justified, but it
    received a mixed assessment of the Munich audience, part of which
    responded to the Minister's words extremely aggressively, almost
    bringing the situation to a scandal.

    But the matter now isn't, surely, the scandal and it is that this
    incident became a characteristic touch to the fact that contemporary
    international law is in a deep crisis and has long experienced it. The
    clash of the geopolitical interests of the world centers of power,
    which have been heavily struggling for a new division of the world
    since the collapse of the USSR and the socialist system as a whole,
    has led to the deformation of international law. This is testified,
    in particular, by the fact that in the current confrontation between
    Russia and the West both sides, justifying their own positions in
    the dispute, appeal to the same rules and principles of international
    law, interpreting them solely for their own benefit and then act in
    accordance with their "own "concept. The situation is like in the
    well-known proverb: "The law is like a pole, which side you turn it,
    it will emerge there". As a result, it generates the policy of double
    standards, greatly complicating the solution of conflicts and leading
    to new tragedies.

    The abovementioned words were voiced by Sergei Lavrov in the context
    of the Ukrainian vector of the Russian foreign policy activities,
    but they are surely topical also in terms of the Karabakh settlement
    process. Having witnessed how Sergey Lavrov zealously defended in
    Munich the right of the Crimea to self-determination, the people
    of Artsakh would like to know whether he intends, as the Foreign
    Minister of Russia, or of a co-chair state of the OSCE Minsk Group,
    to consider the resolution of the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict from
    the same position. After all, Nagorno Karabakh corresponds to all the
    parameters, which the Russian Foreign Minister noted in relation to
    the Crimea. There was a national referendum here, especially more
    than 20 years before the Crimean, at which the people determined
    its own political future. There was also gross discrimination of the
    rights of the indigenous Armenian population in Azerbaijan, and then,
    according to Lavrov, the "prevention of the right to self-determination
    by the use of brute force", which in our case is called a large-scale
    bloody war.

    Surely, the question of whether Russia intends to follow its declared
    principles is purely rhetorical, and it is hardly worth expecting
    Moscow's attitude to the Nagorno Karabakh issue similar to that to
    the Crimea. We have a bitter experience. In 2008, after Russia's
    recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the Russian party,
    "forgetting" about its formula of universality, advised us not to
    compare the Nagorno Karabakh conflict with those of Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia. And we are likely to be recommended again not to
    compare the Karabakh conflict with the Ukrainian.

    But, here's a curious thing - such a comparison was made there,
    in Munich, by the President of Azerbaijan, actually opposing Lavrov
    in absentia, having called both conflicts the "mirror images of each
    other". During the discussions on the "Unresolved conflicts in Europe,
    besides Ukraine", Aliyev, taking advantage of the situation, stated
    that "the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan has the same value
    as the territorial integrity of Ukraine" and started his Pharisee
    reasoning about double standards.

    It is more than obvious that only with a unified approach to the
    principles and norms of international law and objective implementation
    of the law enforcement practice we can achieve what, as Lavrov
    stressed, is prescribed by the UN Charter - the right of nations to
    self-determination is the priority, and the territorial integrity
    and sovereignty must be respected. We would like to believe that
    after overcoming the Ukrainian crisis Russia will extrapolate the
    resolution of the Crimean issue to Nagorno Karabakh. Otherwise,
    "empty words will not relieve the hearts" (Schiller).

    Leonid MARTIROSSIAN

    Editor-in-Chief of Azat Artsakh newspaper
    http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1697: one-kind-of-speeches-and-other-kind-of-speeches&catid=3:all&Itemid=4



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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