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  • Karabakh Debates Its Future

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    Feb 1 2007

    Karabakh Debates Its Future
    Karabakh Armenians say they prefer the status quo to an uncertain
    peace deal.

    By Ashot Beglarian in Stepanakert

    A series of broad public debates in Nagorny Karabakh suggest public
    opinion amongst Karabakh Armenians is highly sceptical of the
    compromises being proposed by international mediators on the future
    of the disputed territory.

    The Armenia-based organisation, the International Centre for Human
    Development, organised a series of public meetings with the aim of
    soliciting a wide range of views on the future of Karabakh. Now an
    unrecognised territory with an overwhelmingly Armenian population,
    Karabakh has been de facto separate from Azerbaijan for a decade and
    a half. A ceasefire has maintained an uneasy peace between the two
    parties since 1994.

    The meetings were held on the eve of the visit to Karabakh on January
    25 by the three international diplomats of the OSCE's Minsk Group
    responsible for negotiating a peaceful settlement of the conflict,
    the American Matt Bryza, Russia's Yury Merzlyakov and France's
    Bernard Fassier.

    Tevan Poghosian, executive director of the International Centre for
    Human Development and chief organiser of the initiative, said a key
    aim of the debates was to bring the views of ordinary people to the
    attention of the mediators, despite the fact that their talks were
    held behind closed doors.

    As well as a meeting in the Karabakhi capital, Stepanakert, two
    debates were also held in the regional centres of Martuni and
    Martakert.

    The organisers said they gave the discussions an open format to
    encourage the free exchange of ideas. Alisa Mkrtchian, a participant
    in one of the debates, described it as a kind of `brainstorming'.

    More than 217 ideas were voiced and written up on large screens for
    everyone to consider and discuss.

    Mkrtchian noted that there was wide support for the preservation of
    the current status quo for Karabakh in which, despite being
    unrecognised internationally, most local residents believe the
    territory enjoys a measure of stability.

    `Considering that there were representatives of different social
    groups, political views, ages and so on, round the table, this level
    of unanimity was quite telling and it reflects the attitude of
    society to the Nagorny Karabakh problem and to ways of solving it,'
    said Mkrtchian.

    The Karabakh Armenians do not have a place at the table in the Minsk
    Group negotiations, held between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Elements of
    a peace deal under discussion include the return of the six
    territories under Armenian control outside Karabakh and a referendum
    on the future status of the entity.

    Masis Mailian, deputy foreign minister of Karabakh, welcomed the
    discussions because he said that the public in Karabakh had been left
    `on the sidelines' in the debate over their own future.

    `I believe that the authorities should always rely on public opinion
    and the position of society for its actions,' said Mailian. `There
    are a lot of interesting ideas, which the authorities should
    definitely take into account in the course of its work.'

    The participants debated five future scenarios: the status quo;
    independence for Karabakh; Karabakh joining Armenia; Karabakh
    becoming an international protectorate and giving up the surrounding
    Azerbaijani territories; and Karabakh ceding the territories in
    return for potential independence in the future (the closest option
    to what is currently under negotiation). The option that Karabakh
    should return to being part of Azerbaijan was not put forward and no
    one even mentioned this as a possibility.

    At the end of the debate, the majority of participants - 31 people in
    all - voted for the option of independence, twelve said they wanted
    to keep the status quo, with other options receiving much weaker
    support.

    There was widespread opposition to some of the ideas being discussed
    during the current peace talks - the deployment of international
    peacekeepers in the conflict zone, giving up of territories, return
    of the pre-war Azerbaijani population and a referendum on the future
    status of Karabakh.

    One participant said, `Since the truce of 1994, the ceasefire regime
    has been maintained thanks to the balance of forces that has formed.
    This is a unique case. The introduction of a third force can disturb
    this balance and lead to unpredictable consequences.'

    A fairly typical view came from Eleonora Gazarian, who said, `One
    thing became clear in the course of our discussions - we will not
    make any kind of compromises under someone else's diktat. I think
    that we need a comprehensive solution with the definition of the
    status of Nagorny Karabakh first and then mutual concessions.'

    On a broader point almost everyone was agreed - that the Karabakh
    Armenians should proceed at full speed with the project of building
    up democratic and civic institutions in their unrecognised state,
    whatever their international status.

    Eduard Agabekian, the mayor of Stepanakert, said, `We must create the
    state of which we dream - with a stable economy, socially just, where
    there is no conception that some are allowed to do everything and
    others are not even allowed to do what is permitted by law.'

    Poghosian said he was pleased with the debates and planned to hold
    similar initiatives in the future. `People had the chance to check
    certain items of information and to give their own views of the
    problem,' he said. `Initiatives like this also have the aim of
    inculcating young people with the ability to negotiate and solve
    conflicts.'

    Ashot Beglarian is a freelance journalist and IWPR contributor in
    Nagorny Karabakh.
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