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Kosovo -- "An Example" For Separatist Karabakh

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  • Kosovo -- "An Example" For Separatist Karabakh

    KOSOVO -- "AN EXAMPLE" FOR SEPARATIST KARABAKH

    Reuters, UK
    July 18 2007

    More STEPANAKERT, Azerbaijan, July 17 (Reuters) - International
    recognition of Kosovo as an independent state would give new impetus
    to the sovereignty claim of Azerbaijan's breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh,
    a senior separatist said on Tuesday.

    Those opposing independence being granted to Serbia's province
    of Kosovo say it will set a legal precedent that could re-ignite
    separatist disputes elsewhere, especially in the former Soviet Union,
    scene of four unresolved "frozen conflicts."

    "The Kosovo model of conflict settlement could be an example for the
    resolution of other conflicts," Nagorno Karabakh's separatist minister
    Masis Mailyan told Reuters in an interview.

    "If it (Kosovo) is recognised, then it is interesting to me in that
    an unrecognised country has won recognition in spite of the opinion
    of its former sovereign rulers."

    "In this sense the Kosovo model is an interesting one for us. That
    is to say, we could achieve recognition under a new scenario."

    Russia is blocking a Western-backed proposal to set Kosovo on the
    path to independence, citing the fact that Belgrade does not want to
    relinquish sovereignty over its province.

    Kosovo's Albanian majority has warned that could force it into a
    unilateral declaration of independence. If this happens, the United
    States and some European states have indicated they may recognise
    Kosovo as a sovereign state.

    Nagorno-Karabakh's fight to split from Azerbaijan was the bloodiest
    of the former Soviet Union's separatist wars, with about 35,000 people
    killed and over a million forced to flee their homes.

    The ethnic Armenian majority drove out Azerbaijan's forces and now
    runs its own affairs with support from neighbouring Armenia, but no
    state has recognised the region's independence.

    Mailyan said Nagorno-Karabakh would keep pursuing a negotiated
    settlement with Azerbaijan in the hope that would lead to international
    recognition. Peace talks lasting more than 15 years have failed to
    make significant progress.

    But he said recognition for Kosovo would encourage Nagorno-Karabakh
    to pursue a second track, to lobby foreign states and international
    organisations to grant it recognition with or without Azerbaijan's
    consent.

    Elsewhere in the former Soviet Union, separatists in Georgia's
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia regions, and in Moldova's breakaway
    Transdniestria, are also seeking international recognition and say
    they are following developments in Kosovo with interest.
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