Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Hopes Fading For Karabakh Peace

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • BAKU: Hopes Fading For Karabakh Peace

    HOPES FADING FOR KARABAKH PEACE
    Ali Verdiyev

    Baku Sun, Azerbaijan
    April 2 2007

    BAKU - Hopes for a peaceful solution to the conflict between
    neighboring Azerbaijan and Armenia over the disputed Azerbaijani
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh are fading away, as peace talks brokered by
    international mediators continue to produce anything but a long-awaited
    breakthrough to resolve the almost 20-year conflict.

    This time, the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers, Elmar
    Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanyan, met in Geneva to discuss a peace plan
    prepared by the OSCE Minsk Group, a team of mediators set up to deal
    with the conflict. But the two failed to make progress in the talks,
    official statements from both sides say.

    "Elmar Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanyan are expected to meet in April.

    This was agreed during the meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian
    foreign ministers in Geneva," the press secretary of the Azerbaijani
    Foreign Ministry, Khazar Ibrahim, told local news agency Trend in
    a statement which, in delicate diplomatic language, means that no
    progress was made in the latest meeting of the ministers. The two
    men focused on a possible meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian
    presidents, but there should be a "solid basis" for the meeting of
    the presidents, which is not there now, Ibrahim stressed.

    However, the Armenian side was much more forthcoming about the meeting
    in Geneva. "Despite the preparatory work the peace talks for the
    settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict progress slowly," Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan stated. "The Geneva meeting proved
    again that there are discrepancies between us that are difficult to
    overcome. In this context the meeting was very difficult. We agreed
    to meet again in April. We may manage to come to agreement and it
    will be clear when the presidents meet. Of course, this meeting will
    take place after the parliamentary elections in Armenia," Oskanyan
    told journalists in Yerevan.

    Experts say that there is hardly likely to be any progress in the
    peace talks until the parliamentary elections in Armenia in May this
    year. Yerevan has taken a timeout to make sure that the elections
    are conducted without any domestic political ferment. Any agreement
    or decision on Karabakh may actually stir emotions and feelings
    in Armenia, as much as in Azerbaijan, in the run-up to the crucial
    elections.

    The ministers met with the participation of the Russian, French and
    US co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group - Yuriy Merzlyakov, Bernard
    Fassier and Matthew Bryza, as well as the personal envoy of the OSCE
    chairman-in-office, Andrzej Kasprzik. The peace plan supported by
    the OSCE Minsk Group reportedly contains the basic principles for
    a settlement of the conflict. These principles envision two major
    initiatives - the withdrawal of Armenian forces from the Azerbaijani
    districts around Nagorno-Karabakh and the determination of an interim
    status for the self-proclaimed republic before a referendum on the
    final status of the territory, the Russian co-chairman of the Minsk
    Group, Yuriy Merzlyakov, said.

    Armenia occupied Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding districts of
    Azerbaijan in the 1992-1994 war. It now demands that one of these
    districts, Lachin, be used as a corridor to connect the separatist
    region with Armenia.

    The status of the separatist Azerbaijani enclave seems to have been
    the bone of contention in the peace talks over the past decade.

    Armenia insists that the status should be determined in a referendum
    to be held among the population of the so-called Nagorno-Karabakh
    republic, but Baku is sensitive about this idea and demands
    unconditional withdrawal of the Armenian armed forces from the
    occupied Azerbaijani districts. In the meantime, Azerbaijanis are
    still uncompromising when it comes to the Karabakh issue, which they
    see as a matter of national pride and honor.

    A recent public survey held among 1,000 Azerbaijanis in 15 districts
    and 12 towns showed that 59.4 per cent of the respondents do not
    accept any compromises on the Karabakh conflict, political analyst
    Rasim Musabayov told a news conference in Baku.

    Only 11.5 per cent of the respondents supported the granting of
    cultural self-administration and local government opportunities to
    Nagorno-Karabakh, while 9.5 per cent agreed to a self-administration
    model similar to that of Azerbaijan's autonomous region of Nakhchivan.

    Further, 11.1 per cent said that the status of Nagorno-Karabakh could
    be determined through a referendum on condition that Azerbaijan's
    internally displaced persons return to their native lands.

    Nevertheless, the bulk of respondents were pessimistic about the
    prospects for settlement of the conflict, as 46.7 per cent said that
    the "neither peace no war" situation will continue. While 38.4 per
    cent of the respondents said that there will be progress towards
    a peaceful resolution of the conflict, 12.7 per cent believe that
    military hostilities will resume.

    Thus, the public feelings in Azerbaijan, a country which has lost
    control over nearly one-fifth of its territory and has now about a
    million refugees and IDPs, following Armenia's military aggression, and
    the whims of Armenia, which is interested in preserving the status-quo,
    leave little hope that the conflict will be resolved peacefully and
    in the soonest time possible. Yet there are opportunities that require
    a constructive position, first of all from Armenia.
Working...
X