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Integrity And Determination - All About The Nation

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  • Integrity And Determination - All About The Nation

    INTEGRITY AND DETERMINATION - ALL ABOUT THE NATION
    By Raffi K. Hovannisian

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    June 14 2006

    With the purpose of keeping people informed, newspapers can and should
    publish, side by side or in sequence, comment pieces offering points
    and counterpoints concerning conflict situations that affect peace
    and security.

    At some juncture, however, partisan polemics must give way to the
    consideration of hard facts in order to resolve contemporary divides
    inherited from the ebb and flow of history. The truth is often harsh
    and can cause pain to both the messenger and recipient.

    None of us -- Armenians, Azeris, Turks -- can boast a spotless register
    of state-building, mutual respect for human rights, or even regard
    for the liberty and dignity of our own citizens. We must do better
    in having our deeds match our words both individually and in concert.

    With regard to Nagorno-Karabakh, understanding the following points
    is vital:

    ~U In no way discounting Azeri cultural affinities, Nagorno-Karabakh
    has been historically and will be in modern times part of the Armenian
    patrimony. Its forcible inclusion by Stalin in Soviet Azerbaijan had,
    and continues to have, no juridical basis under international law. For
    those who might argue that it does, then so should Nagorno-Karabakh's
    response to the aggression by Azeri forces, in the form of its 1991
    referendum on independence from Soviet Azerbaijan. The referendum was
    held not only according to universal principles of self-determination
    and other standards of international practice, but also pursuant to
    the Soviet Constitution and relevant law on secession.

    The question at issue is not the indisputable right of today's
    Azerbaijan to its territorial integrity, but specifically the lawful
    frontiers of that integrity. Nagorno-Karabakh's legitimate quest for
    decolonization and for sovereign control of its own identity, security
    and destiny is anchored both in fact and in law. Whether acknowledged
    or not, it is a precedent established in East Timor, Montenegro and
    other places yet to come and requires no further foundation.

    ~U The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's 1992
    mediation mandate and the tripartite 1994 ceasefire bear witness,
    no matter how or how many times you slice it, to the fact that there
    can be no enduring settlement to the conflict without the full-fledged
    participation of the republic of Nagorno-Karabakh. That is the bottom
    line. For its own reasons, the Azerbaijani government in Baku can
    whip up militant xenophobia, raze the medieval Armenian cemetery at
    Julfa to the ground and then try with a straight face to deny it. But
    if it ever means to negotiate, it has to talk to the Nagorno-Karabakh
    capital of Stepanakert just as much as the Armenian capital of Yerevan.

    ~U No comprehensive solution on Nagorno-Karabakh will ever be
    achieved without a synchronized normalization of the Turkish-Armenian
    relationship based on an honest and brave assessment of history and its
    contemporary consequences. We cannot build a peaceful and prosperous
    region, where all political actors are on the same page with regard
    to security and cooperation, by seeking an escape hatch from the
    record of genocide and its derivative legacy, however sensitive or
    inconvenient dealing with this history may be. We're all grown men
    and women. It's time to face the music.

    ~U Finally, we will be unable to forge a meaningful reconciliation --
    one that touches the lives of all of the region's nations and people --
    without the victory of democracy and rule of law in every jurisdiction,
    whether considered separately or taken together. There can be no
    peace, security, realization of national interests or international
    partnership where tyranny triumphs over liberty and where semi-feudal,
    post-Soviet verticals of power prejudice the future of forward-looking
    generations in Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia, Turkey, and
    the world beyond.

    The promise of freedom, justice and equity belongs to all of us,
    but the long road to its fulfillment must start at home.

    Raffi K. Hovannisian is the former foreign minister of Armenia and
    director of the Armenian Center for National and International Studies.
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