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Jailed Nationalist Sefilian Defends Ter-Petrosian On Karabakh

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  • Jailed Nationalist Sefilian Defends Ter-Petrosian On Karabakh

    JAILED NATIONALIST DEFENDS TER-PETROSIAN ON KARABAKH
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Dec 20 2007

    Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian's conciliatory discourse on
    Nagorno-Karabakh prompted on Thursday unlikely support from a jailed
    nationalist activist and government critic opposed to Armenian
    territorial concessions to Azerbaijan.

    Zhirayr Sefilian, a prominent veteran of the war in Karabakh, condemned
    as "slander" government allegations that Ter-Petrosian is ready to
    place the Armenian-populated territory back under Azerbaijani rule. In
    a statement released from his prison, Sefilian said although he has
    "serious disagreements" with Ter-Petrosian on the issue, he believes
    that the latter "would not rush to resolve the conflict" in the event
    of his victory in the February 19 presidential election.

    "I am categorically against the notion that Levon is a president who
    would surrender Artsakh (Karabakh)," he said. "True, we have serious
    disagreements with him on the Artsakh issue, the most important of
    them being our refusal to see any document envisaging territorial
    concessions on the negotiation table."

    "At the same time I am convinced that deep down, as Armenian people,
    Levon Ter-Petrosian and his allies are also against conceding
    territories, but because they are more pragmatic than us, they believe
    that the conflict can not be resolved without concessions," he added.

    Ending his nearly decade-long silence with a series of recent
    speeches, Ter-Petrosian has said he continues to believe that Armenia's
    sustainable development is impossible without a compromise peace deal
    with Azerbaijan and accused the current Armenian leaders of dragging
    out the conflict's resolution. He has said at the same time that they
    are now ready to accept the kind of a peace plan which he advocated
    before his resignation in 1998 and which they rejected as "defeatist."

    President Robert Kocharian, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and their
    allies have responded to these statements with renewed allegations
    that the ex-president wants to "surrender" Karabakh to Azerbaijan.

    Sefilian, who is regarded as a political prisoner by his supporters
    and many other opposition figures, denied such claims, pointing to
    Ter-Petrosian's September 21 remark that the situation is now so
    unfavorable for the Armenian side that he does not know what should
    be done about it. "That is, Levon Ter-Petrosian hinted that he would
    not rush to solve the problem," claimed the Lebanese citizen of
    Armenian descent.

    The main aim of Ter-Petrosian's bid to return to power, continued
    Sefilian, is to "restore our statehood and constitutional order,"
    rather than make peace with Azerbaijan. "Therefore, supporting his
    return to power does not mean being in favor of ceding the liberated
    territories," he said.

    Sefilian and another war veteran, Vartan Malkhasian, were arrested
    in December last year just days after founding a new pressure
    group opposed to Armenian troop withdrawal from any of the occupied
    Azerbaijani territories around Karabakh. They both were charged with
    plotting a violent overthrow of the government. Only Malkhasian was
    convicted of the coup charge by a Yerevan district court last July.

    He was sentenced to two years in prison.

    Sefilian was handed a 18-month jail term under another article of
    the Criminal Code that deals with illegal arms possession.
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