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BAKU: Azeri President Says Munich Talks Last Chance To Settle Karaba

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  • BAKU: Azeri President Says Munich Talks Last Chance To Settle Karaba

    AZERI PRESIDENT SAYS MUNICH TALKS LAST CHANCE TO SETTLE KARABAKH PEACEFULLY

    ANS TV
    Nov 21 2009
    Azerbaijan

    If the next meeting with the Armenian president does not yield a
    result, Azerbaijan may try to regain its Armenian-occupied territories
    militarily, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said.

    Aliyev said the meeting scheduled to take place in Munich on 22
    November might be crucial in the settlement of the long-standing
    conflict over the Nagornyy Karabakh region.

    "This meeting has to play a crucial role in the negotiations," private
    ANS TV showed Aliyev in the western district of Goranboy addressing
    a group of displaced people from Nagornyy Karabakh on 20 November.

    "Several meetings have been held this year, and none of them was
    fruitful. If this meeting, too, does not yield any results, then
    we will lose hope in the negotiations. And if we lose hope in the
    negotiations, we will have no other choice, and we have to be ready
    for that.

    "The work done in the field of army building over the past years has a
    definite goal, naturally. We are spending billions to strengthen our
    army, purchase new weapons, equipment, to reinforce our positions on
    the contact line. We are doing this because we have never ruled out
    this option. We have the full right to liberate our lands militarily.

    International legal norms also recognize this right.

    "Simply, we want this issue to be settled peacefully, and we do not
    want war. But if Armenia thinks that we will be holding talks for
    ever, it is mistaken. If we see that Armenia is simply dragging time
    and it wants to make it an eternal problem through talks, then an
    end will be put to the negotiations," Aliyev said.

    The president said that Armenia was no match for Azerbaijan in terms
    of economic development and army building and ruled out any economic
    cooperation with Armenia until the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict is
    resolved.

    "How can there be any cooperation? One country has occupied another
    country's land, left people homeless and has carried out a policy
    of ethnic cleansing, and then they say you should cooperate. This is
    out of the question," he said.

    Aliyev also said that some international organizations might think
    that freezing the settlement of the conflict was better than war.

    "Some international organizations may think that let the situation
    continue as it is, what is important is that there is no war, some
    even do not care about what conditions our people have been living
    in, and that has been going on not for a year or a couple of years
    but for almost 20 years. But how can one tolerate that. Some think
    it had better stay in this frozen state than there is war. We cannot
    be satisfied with this status quo," the Azerbaijani president said.
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