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Karabakh Leader Urges Action On Azerbaijan Threats

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  • Karabakh Leader Urges Action On Azerbaijan Threats

    KARABAKH LEADER URGES ACTION ON AZERBAIJAN THREATS

    Pakistan Daily Times
    April 28 2013

    PARIS: The international community must take Azerbaijan's threats of
    regaining the disputed region of Nagorny Karabakh seriously and
    condemn Baku's ongoing arms-buying spree, the breakaway territory's
    leader said Friday.

    Seized by ethnic Armenian separatists in a war in the early 1990s that
    left more than 30,000 dead, Karabakh is at the heart of long-simmering
    tensions between ex-Soviet neighbours Azerbaijan and Armenia. Violence
    continues to flare on its borders, with a least six soldiers killed so
    far this year, and a new conflict would threaten to draw in regional
    powers like Armenia's ally Russia, Azerbaijan's ally Turkey and Iran.

    Baku has vowed to retake control of the small mountainous region,
    whose self-declared independence has not been recognised by any state,
    including Armenia.

    In France for a three-day visit, the region's president Bako Sahakian
    told AFP he saw no signs of a breakthrough in peace talks and warned
    that Azerbaijan was stoking tensions with enormous arms purchases.

    "We can only be worried by the policy of militarisation and
    over-arming undertaken by Azerbaijan, because there are also clear and
    explicit threats against our country," he said.

    "The international community must react to this situation," he said.

    Fuelled by the oil-rich country's energy exports, Azerbaijan's defence
    spending has skyrocketed in recent years, with this year's military
    budget at $1.9 billion (1.4 billion euros) - almost 15 percent of the
    entire state budget.

    Officials from Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan have met
    repeatedly for peace talks since a ceasefire was signed in 1994, with
    negotiations mediated by the Minsk Group chaired by France, Russia and
    the United States. Sahakian, a former soldier and security service
    chief who was elected to a second term last year, said that while
    talks have failed to result in a peace deal, they have at least been
    useful in preventing another war.

    But he said the negotiations should be expanded to include
    representatives of the authorities in Karabakh, which is home to about
    150,000 people.

    "To have real and serious progress in the negotiating process the
    format must be re-established to have participants from Nagorny
    Karabakh," Sahakian said.

    He said he believed a negotiated solution was possible and insisted
    authorities in Karabakh would not be the ones to start a new war.

    "It is a complex conflict, you cannot expect a solution from one day
    to the next. But there is no alternative to peace and dialogue,"
    Sahakian said.

    Experts have warned that a fresh conflict would be even more
    devastating than the 1992-1994 Karabakh war - one of the bloodiest of
    the many regional conflicts that followed the collapse of the Soviet
    Union.

    Karabakh survives thanks largely to financial and military backing
    from Armenia and supporters in the widespread Armenian diaspora,
    including in France.

    Sahakian said he was hoping to drum up investment in France in the
    hopes of boosting the region's small economy, which relies mainly on
    agriculture, manufacturing and some mining.

    He said he also expected progress soon on one of the region's key
    efforts - resuming commercial flights into a revamped airport in the
    capital, Stepanakert. afp

    http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2013%5C04%5C28%5Cstory_28-4-2013_pg14_4



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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