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U.S. Revises 'Anti-Armenian' Karabakh Statement

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  • U.S. Revises 'Anti-Armenian' Karabakh Statement

    U.S. REVISES 'ANTI-ARMENIAN' KARABAKH STATEMENT
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 20 2007

    Facing strong Armenian protests, the U.S. State Department has
    revised a controversial passage in its latest human rights report
    that described Nagorno-Karabakh as an Azerbaijani territory occupied
    by Armenia.

    The original version of the annual report released on March 4
    said Armenia "continues to occupy the Azerbaijani territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding Azerbaijani territories." The
    statement was welcomed by many in Azerbaijan but was rejected as
    inaccurate by the Armenian government and Armenian lobbying groups
    in the United States.

    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said later in March that Armenian
    diplomats have raised the issue with State Department officials. He
    said the latter admitted that it was an "obvious mistake on their part"
    and promised to "try to make a correction in that document."

    The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) likewise expressed
    "profound concern" at the reference. "To say that Nagorno-Karabakh is
    an Azerbaijani territory and that Armenia occupies Nagorno-Karabakh
    and other territories is to ignore the very fundamentals of this
    conflict," Ken Hachikian, the ANCA chairman, said in an April 3 letter
    to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

    The revised version of the U.S. report's chapter on human rights
    practices in Armenia does not refer to Karabakh as an internationally
    recognized part of Azerbaijan and stops short of explicitly accusing
    Yerevan of occupying Azerbaijani districts surrounding the disputed
    enclave. "Armenian forces occupy large portions of Azerbaijan territory
    adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian officials maintain that they
    do not "occupy" Nagorno-Karabakh itself," reads the report posted on
    the State Department's website.

    The Armenian Foreign Ministry refused to comment on what is a rare
    change in the text of a department report made after its official
    release. A ministry spokesman only reiterated Oskanian's earlier
    comments on the issue.

    The ANCA, for its part, was only partly satisfied with the revision
    which it said was made public this week. "We remain concerned that
    the amended text continues to fall short of accurately describing the
    situation, as well as by the fact that the Azerbaijan section of the
    report continues to make incorrect assertions, thus making its text
    inconsistent with the State Department's own revision of the Armenia
    section," its executive director, Aram Hamparian, said in a statement.

    Washington has always stated that it supports Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity in the Karabakh dispute. But that has not kept it from
    helping to draft over the past decade peace proposals that would
    essentially pave the way for international recognition of Karabakh's
    secession from Azerbaijan.
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