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New President In Nagornyy Karabakh A "Predictable" Partner

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  • New President In Nagornyy Karabakh A "Predictable" Partner

    NEW PRESIDENT IN NAGORNYY KARABAKH A "PREDICTABLE" PARTNER

    Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
    21 Jul 07

    Nagornyy Karabakh has held a presidential election on 19
    July. Commenting on the Karabakh president-elect Bako Sahakyan,
    the Armenian Mediamax news agency says that the election "did not
    work miracle". Sahakyan's election, the analytical article went on
    to say, signifies that he will be a predictable partner for both
    Yerevan and the Karabakh peace brokers. The new leader of Nagornyy
    Karabakh cannot be a fully independent political figure as it is an
    open secret that all the most important domestic and foreign policy
    issues as well as economic decisions in Stepanakert are adopted with
    Yerevan's consent and there is no good reason to believe that this
    tradition will be broken, the piece said. The following is the text of
    weekly analytical review by Armenian news agency Mediamax on 21 July
    headlined: "No surprises"; subheadings have been inserted editorially:

    The 19 July presidential election in the Nagornyy Karabakh republic
    (NKR) did not work miracle. As was expected, the former chief of the
    national security service, Bako Sahakyan, was elected head of the
    republic. His main rival Masis Mailyan, the deputy foreign minister
    of the NKR, has already recognized his defeat.

    Predictable choice

    What does Bako Sahakyan's election signify for a peaceful settlement
    of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict? Chiefly, the fact that the NKR
    authorities will remain predictable partners for official Yerevan
    and for the international mediators.

    Bako Sahakyan represents the "second echelon" of leaders of the
    Karabakh movement (representatives of the "first echelon" are accepted
    to consider Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, who was previously
    the head of the NKR; Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan; and
    the incumbent president of the NKR, Arkadi Ghukasyan, who was the
    Karabakh foreign minister during Kocharyan's presidency). He will
    steadily adhere to those positions to which Stepanakert has been
    stuck to over the last eight years.

    In the course of the election campaign Bako Sahakyan said that "the
    restoration of the comprehensive negotiations process will enable
    them to avoid almost unfruitful discussions and concentrate on the
    crux of the problem".

    In a late June interview with Mediamax, he said that "no-one should
    have illusions to the effect that the Karabakh problem could be
    resolved without taking interests of the Nagornyy Karabakh people
    into consideration". Bako Sahakyan noted that if he is elected the
    head of the NKR, "the position of Stepanakert, which is a proponent
    of Karabakh's return to the negotiating table, will remain unchanged".

    Commenting on the issue of possible handover of the territories under
    control of the NKR to Azerbaijan, Bako Sahakyan said that the "key
    problems of the settlement, including the issue of the territories,
    are topics of comprehensive negotiations".

    He said that the issue of NKR's international status has been and
    remains the key condition for the Karabakh side in the settlement
    process. Once this is resolved, it is possible to consider the
    consequences of the conflict.

    "The territorial component along with the defence army of the NKR is
    the basis of Karabakh's security system, and we have no moral rights
    to undermine this system when the conflict remains unresolved,"
    Bako Sahakyan said.

    Yerevan behind all important decisions

    On the other hand, the Karabakh president-elect has become a
    public politician only in the course of the election campaign
    and, undoubtedly, he will need time to get used to the role of a
    fully-fledged leader of Nagornyy Karabakh.

    One should also bear in mind that given the current state of affairs,
    when Armenia's president is Robert Kocharyan and his most promising
    successor as a result of the 2008 election will be Serzh Sargsyan,
    another native of Nagornyy Karabakh, the leader of Nagornyy Karabakh
    cannot be a completely independent political figure. It is an open
    secret that all the most important domestic and foreign policy issues
    as well as economic decisions in Stepanakert are made with Yerevan's
    consent and there is no good reason to believe that this tradition
    will be broken.

    The NKR president's foreign policy role will directly depend on
    the format of the negotiations process. It is already evident that
    no changes will take place in the peace process until the 2008
    presidential elections in Armenia and Azerbaijan. It is hard to
    foretell how the continuation of the negotiations process will be
    after the likely election of Serzh Sargsyan as Armenian president,
    and almost doubtless re-election of Ilham Aliyev as Azerbaijani
    president. If the negotiations continue in the current format (at
    the level of the foreign ministers and the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan), then the role of Bako Sahakyan, like the role of Arkadi
    Ghukasyan, will be limited. Even though Azerbaijan agrees to return to
    the comprehensive trilateral negotiations format, then in this case,
    the role of Bako Sahakyan and his administration will undoubtedly
    grow. However, we should acknowledge that there is no reason to expect
    changes in Azerbaijan's position.

    Bako Sahakyan biography

    Bako Sahakyan was born on 30 August 1960 in Stepanakert. In 1977,
    he finished a secondary school; in 1978-80, he served in the Soviet
    army. In 1981, he was employed as a machinist at the Stepanakert
    mechanical plant.

    In 1983-1987, he was a restorer at the Stepanakert branch of the
    scientific department for the restoration of old monuments. Since
    1988, he has been an activist of the Artsakh movement. In 1990,
    he joined ranks of the Nagornyy Karabakh self-defence forces.

    In 1992-1993, he was the deputy chief of the committee for the
    self-defence forces of the NKR on rear service. In 1993-1995, he was
    a deputy chief of staff for rear services of the NKR defence army. In
    1995-96, he was deputy commander of the NKR defence army for external
    relations. In 1997-1999, he was an aide to the minister of interior
    and national security of Armenia.

    In 1999-2001, he was the interior minister of the NKR. From 2001
    to 2007, he was the chief of the NKR state department for national
    security and the director of the NKR national security service.

    Sahakyan is married with two children.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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