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PACE Subcommittee On Conflict Prevention Established

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  • PACE Subcommittee On Conflict Prevention Established

    PACE SUBCOMMITTEE ON CONFLICT PREVENTION ESTABLISHED

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    23.02.2010 19:37 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Karabakh conflict issue is activated regularly
    in international organizations and I do not think that a new process
    has started. We just started to pay more attention to it, David
    Harutyunyan , head of the Armenian delegation in PACE told a news
    conference in Yerevan.

    Referring to the resumption of the work of Subcommittee on
    Nagorno-Karabakh, Harutyunyan said that this issue is on the agenda
    of PACE Bureau, but is delayed for different reasons.

    The PACE subcommittee on prevention of conflicts has been established.

    According to Harutyunyan, this structure is likely to hurt than help
    resolve conflicts.

    The armed conflict between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan broke
    out in 1998, as result of the ethnic cleansing the latter launched
    in the final years of the Soviet Union. The Karabakh War was fought
    from 1991 (when the Nagorno Karabakh Republic was proclaimed) to 1994
    (when a ceasefire was sealed by Armenia, NKR and Azerbaijan). Most
    of Nagorno Karabakh and a security zone consisting of 7 regions is
    now under control of NKR defense army. Armenia and Azerbaijan are
    holding peace talks mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group up till now.

    The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), which held
    its first session in Strasbourg on 10 August 1949, can be considered
    the oldest internationalparliamentary assembly with a pluralistic
    composition of democratically elected members of parliament established
    on the basis of an intergovernmental treaty. The Assembly is one of
    the two statutory organs of the Council of Europe, which is composed of
    the Committee of Ministers (the Ministers of Foreign Affairs, meeting
    usually at the level of their deputies) and the Assembly representing
    the political forces (majority and opposition) in its member states.

    It has a total of 642 members - 321 principal members and
    321 substitutes [1] - who are representatives of each member
    state. There are also 18 delegates from the Canadian, Israeli and
    Mexican observers. The size of each country determines its number
    of representatives and number of votes. This is in contrast in the
    committee of ministers, where each country has one vote.

    Each State member selects its method of designating its representatives
    to the parliamentary assembly; however, they must be chosen from among
    the members of the respective Parliaments. Moreover, the political
    composition of each national delegation must reflect the representation
    of the different parties within the respective parliaments.
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