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Differences 'Narrowing' In Karabakh Talks, Says Lavrov

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  • Differences 'Narrowing' In Karabakh Talks, Says Lavrov

    DIFFERENCES 'NARROWING' IN KARABAKH TALKS, SAYS LAVROV

    Asbarez
    Feb 8th, 2010

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov

    MUNICH (Combined Sources)-Armenia and Azerbaijan are narrowing their
    differences over a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict sought
    by international mediators, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said
    over the weekend, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported on Monday.

    "We are trying to help Armenians and Azerbaijanis to reach a common
    approach," the DPA news agency quoted him as saying at the Munich
    Security Conference. "It's obviously a very difficult issue, but
    things are moving."

    "The understanding is growing and the number of issues that must be
    tackled by the top leaders is reducing and we are trying to help,"
    Lavrov said.

    Russia, which co-chairs the OSCE Minsk Group with the United States
    and France, has stepped up its involvement in the Karabakh negotiating
    process of late, with President Dmitry Medvedev hosting this year's
    first meeting of his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts near the
    Russian city of Sochi late last month.

    Lavrov said after those talks that President Serzh Sarkisian and
    Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev have essentially agreed on a preamble to
    the basic principles of a Karabakh settlement put forward by the
    Minsk Group co-chairs. He said they also agreed to "prepare their
    own concrete ideas and formulations" on the remaining sticking points.

    Russia's chief Karabakh negotiator, Yuri Merzlyakov, said in Sochi
    that Baku and Yerevan will submit relevant proposals in the next two
    weeks. Merzlyakov told the Azerbaijani APA news agency on Monday that
    the mediators have yet to receive them.

    The mediators announced earlier in January that they have developed an
    "updated version" of the basic principles in an effort to facilitate
    their acceptance by the parties. The refused to disclose the changes
    made in the document.

    In an interview with the Euronews TV channel aired last week, Aliyev
    again asserted that the mediators' peace proposals are "based on
    restoration of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan." "Azerbaijan
    will never agree to independence of Nagorno-Karabakh, or to any kind
    of mechanisms or procedures which will eventually lead to secession,"
    he said.

    Armenia's leaders insist that the proposed agreement does include
    such a mechanism. They say one of the basic principles upholds the
    Karabakh Armenians' right to formalize the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's
    independence in a future referendum. Officials in Yerevan have also
    sought to cool talk of the signing of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace
    accord in the coming months.

    Aliyev sounded more optimistic on that score. "I hope that what has
    been agreed basically before and what we are planning to agree during
    2010 will put an end to conflict and peace will come to the Caucasus,"
    he said.

    Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry Spokesman, Elkhan Polukhov, reiterated
    Aliyev's remarks in a press briefing on Monday. "Azerbaijan sees
    prospect in negotiations," he said, adding, however, that any
    acceptable resolution for Baku depends on "what extent the Minsk
    Group co-chairs are active."

    Azerbaijan and Turkey have, in recent weeks, stepped up their criticism
    of the Minsk Group in an apparent play to pressure the troika into
    pushing for a resolution of the Karabakh conflict favoring Baku's
    position.

    Aliyev's chief foreign policy aide, Novruz Mammadov, last week accused
    Russia and the West of supporting Armenia in the conflict and thereby
    delaying its peaceful resolution.

    The Azerbaijani official's latest remarks mirrored Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's strong criticism of the international
    mediators voiced days earlier. Erdogan claimed that the Karabakh
    conflict would have already been resolved had the U.S., Russia and
    France "worked hard" enough. He faulted them for not putting sufficient
    pressure on Armenia to end "the occupation of Azerbaijani territory."
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