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Armenia, Azerbaijan Set To Resume Karabakh Talks

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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan Set To Resume Karabakh Talks

    ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN SET TO RESUME KARABAKH TALKS
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 9 2007

    The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan will likely meet
    later this month to continue the thorny search for a peaceful solution
    to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict officials in Yerevan and Baku said
    on Tuesday.

    According to Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, the meeting is "very
    tentatively" scheduled to take place in Moscow on January 23. A
    spokesman for his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov was quoted
    by Azerbaijani media as confirming the information.

    The talks will presumably be attended by the French, Russian and U.S.
    co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. The mediating troika is pressing
    the parties to build on progress that was apparently made by the
    presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan during their last face-to-face
    meeting held in Minsk on November 28.

    President Robert Kocharian made it clear last month, however, that
    Yerevan will not cut any peace deals with Baku before the Armenian
    parliamentary elections due next month. Oskanian insisted on December
    19 that the negotiating process has not been put on hold and will
    continue with "less publicity" in the coming months. The Minsk Group's
    U.S. co-chair, Matthew Bryza, was likewise reported to say that the
    mediators and the parties will continue to "work together quietly."

    Oskanian implied on Tuesday that a breakthrough can be achieved later
    this year. "I have repeatedly said that quite an interesting [peace]
    proposal is on the table," he told a news conference. "Assuming that
    there is political will, one can expect serious progress in this
    process at any moment."

    Oskanian reiterated that further progress in the peace process hinges
    on Azerbaijan's acceptance of the "Nagorno-Karabakh people's right to
    self-determination." The Minsk Group's current peace proposals seem
    to uphold that right, envisaging a future referendum on the disputed
    region's status.

    However, Azerbaijani leaders say they will never agree to Karabakh's
    independence or unification with Armenia. In his New Year address to
    the nation, President Ilham Aliev said Baku can grant the Karabakh
    Armenians only "greater autonomy opportunities within Azerbaijan."

    For his part, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman Tahir Tagizade
    claimed Tuesday that their right to self-determination is not
    incompatible with Azerbaijan's territorial integrity.
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