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Bako Saakian Wins Presidential Election In Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • Bako Saakian Wins Presidential Election In Nagorno-Karabakh

    BAKO SAAKIAN WINS PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH

    The Associated Press
    International Herald Tribune, France
    July 20 2007

    YEREVAN, Armenia: The former security chief of Nagorno-Karabakh has
    won elections for the presidency of the Armenian-controlled breakaway
    region, the election committee said Friday.

    Bako Saakian took 85 percent of Thursday's vote, election committee
    head Sergei Nasibian said.

    Saakian, 47, had headed Nagorno-Karabakh's security service since 2001
    but resigned in June to stand in the election. He ran as an independent
    and will replace Arkady Gukasian, who served two five-year terms.

    Saakian pledged to push for full independence of the mountainous
    territory inside Azerbaijan, whose claim to autonomy is not recognized
    by any country. His main rival, Masis Mailian, got some 12 percent
    of the vote, and the remainder was split among three other candidates.

    Three-quarters of the territory's 92,000 registered voters cast
    ballots.

    It was the fourth presidential election in the impoverished territory
    that has been controlled by Armenian and ethnic Armenian forces since
    a shaky 1994 cease-fire ended one of the bloodiest conflicts that
    followed the Soviet collapse.

    The six-year war killed 30,000 people and drove more than 1 million
    from their homes, including many of the region's ethnic Azeris.

    Today, it remains one of the region's "frozen" conflicts in the former
    Soviet states.

    Azerbaijan has rejected the vote as illegitimate and maintained that
    Armenian separatists came to power in the former autonomous region
    as a result of ethnic cleansing.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia remain locked in a dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh
    despite more than a decade of coaxing from international mediators led
    by the United States, Russia and France to resolve the region's status.

    Armenian Presdent Robert Kocharian congratulated Saakian in a message
    that said the election "bears witness to an irreversible historical
    reality - the existence of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic."

    The mostly agricultural region of 146,000 people tied to Armenia by
    swaths of Azerbaijani territory also under ethnic Armenian control
    has faced a steady brain drain and dire economic problems despite
    financial aid from Armenia and the Armenian diaspora.

    Saakian has said that international recognition of Kosovo
    as an independent state would pave the way for acceptance of
    Nagorno-Karabakh's sovereignty.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a Russian-Turkish term that means "mountainous
    black garden." Ethnic Armenians, who now account for virtually the
    entire population of the territory, prefer to call it Artsakh.
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