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  • BAKU: Azeri, Armenian talks in Strasbourg yield no result - paper

    Azeri, Armenian talks in Strasbourg yield no result - paper

    Ekspress, Baku
    13 May 04

    The meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers held on
    the sidelines of a Council of Europe session in Strasbourg on 12 May
    yielded no results, the Azerbaijani newspaper Ekspress has said. The
    newspaper quoted the Russian mediator in the talks, Yuriy Merzlyakov,
    as saying that the stage-by-stage settlement, which was allegedly to be
    discussed at the meeting, was a failure. At the same time, the Armenian
    president's special envoy said that the goal of the meeting was to
    update the parties on their positions on the Karabakh settlement. In
    accordance with this settlement plan, Armenia is to return the seven
    occupied districts around Nagornyy Karabakh in exchange for the
    reopening of the railway link with Azerbaijan. The following is an
    excerpt from Alakbar Raufoglu report by Azerbaijani newspaper Ekspress
    on 13 May headlined "The Strasbourg meeting yields no results. Yerevan
    rejects the 'option to liberate the seven districts'":

    The Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers, Elmar Mammadyarov and
    Vardan Oskanyan, held a meeting in Strasbourg yesterday. The meeting
    took place on the sidelines of the 114th session of the committee of
    the foreign ministers of the Council of Europe member states. Apart
    from the ministers, the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group, as well as
    the special representatives of the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents
    for the settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, Araz Azimov and
    Tatul Markaryan, participated in the talks. This was the second meeting
    of the new Azerbaijani foreign minister with his Armenian counterpart.

    The talks that started at 1700 Baku time [1200 gmt] ended at 2030
    [1530 gmt]. After expanded three-hour discussions, the ministers
    held tete-a-tete talks. After the talks, the foreign ministers left
    without making any statement for the media.

    "We managed to hold quite an open and successful meeting," Russian
    co-chairman Yuriy Merzlyakov told Ekspress after the meeting. But
    since the talks were "strictly confidential", it was decided not to
    provide information about the ministers' dialogue.

    The discussions were aimed mainly at "familiarization with ideas",
    and the mediators informed the parties about new proposals. "The
    participants in the meeting were also made aware of the Azerbaijani
    option on seven districts [Armenia returns the seven occupied districts
    around Nagornyy Karabakh in exchange for the reopening of transport
    links between the two countries]," Merzlyakov said. "What was most
    important for us was to compare the positions of the conflicting
    parties and to search for possibilities to continue the dialogue."

    Although the Russian diplomat said nothing specific about Armenia's
    stance on the return of the seven districts, he admitted that this
    option was a failure. "The position on this settlement option was
    equivocal from the very beginning, and therefore, I was against
    discussing this idea on its own. But no-one listened to us," said
    Merzlyakov regretfully.

    During the talks, Mammadyarov once again voiced the Baku government's
    stance on the settlement. "Our position is unchanged: Azerbaijan
    will never agree to Nagornyy Karabakh being independent or part
    of Armenia. Any new settlement proposal should be based on these
    principles," the minister said.

    The Armenian Foreign Ministry issued a joint statement by the two
    countries' foreign ministers yesterday evening. The statement says
    that the meeting of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen and the Armenian
    and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in Strasbourg "opened an opportunity
    to discuss future prospects".

    According to the statement, Armenia and Azerbaijan "stated once again
    that they were interested in the settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh
    conflict and agreed to continue this useful dialogue".

    The major achievement of the meeting is that the parties agreed to
    continue the talks. "We did not focus on specific options, but simply
    expressed our views," the special representative of the Azerbaijani
    president for the Karabakh settlement, Araz Azimov, told [the Armenian
    news agency] Mediamax after the meeting.

    He also commented on the recent calls for war in Azerbaijan and
    Armenia. In the official's opinion, in the current situation, peace
    talks "are the best option, and the talks have not run out of their
    potential". Azimov said that the next meeting of the foreign ministers
    "will be agreed by the parties, depending on the situation".

    The special representative of the Armenian president, Tatul Markaryan,
    also described the talks as "very useful" at a news conference in
    Strasbourg yesterday evening. "No new proposals were put forward. The
    goal of the meeting between the ministers and the OSCE Minsk Group
    co-chairmen was to clarify the parties' stance, to learn the other
    side's views and to find a common position," he said.

    Asked by French journalists to comment on Azerbaijan's proposal that
    the seven districts be vacated in exchange for the reopening of the
    railway link, Markaryan said that Armenia was against this option and
    that the Karabakh problem could be resolved only under the "package
    settlement" plan. "This is not a conflict just between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, this is also a problem of ensuring the Karabakh people's
    independence and security," the Armenian diplomat added.

    [Passage omitted: Yesterday marked the 10th anniversary of the Karabakh
    cease-fire agreement]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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